Thanks for the reply anyway, it's a pity though, it'd be useful..

Another bump I've found along the pl/python road: insert ROWTYPE in table..
Maybe you have some hint on that? :)

So, in PLPGSQL I can:

DECLARE
 my_var my_table;
BEGIN
 my_var.col1 := 'asd';
 INSERT INTO my_table VALUES(my_table.*);
END;

How would I do something like that in pl/python?

First, how to declare a ROW-TYPE variable, as they're all python mappings?

my_var = { 'col1': 'asd' } enough? it'd would miss all the other columns...

Second, how to insert it?

plpy.prepare and .execute say they don't support composite types, so I cannot simply pass

pl = plpy.prepare('INSERT INTO core_customer VALUES ($1)', ['my_table'])

Any workarounds for this? (meaning I wouldn't have to specify any columns in the insert statement)

Thanks

On Sex, Mai 29, 2015 at 2:00 , Peter Eisentraut <pete...@gmx.net> wrote:
On 5/18/15 10:52 AM, Filipe Pina wrote:
But one of the functions I need to create needs to accept an array of
 records.

PL/Python doesn't support that.  Some more code needs to be written to
support that.  You did everything correctly.  I don't know of a good
workaround.

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