On 08/27/2015 06:33 AM, Christopher BROWN wrote:
Hello Adrian,

Yep, Charles' explanation helped me understand what was going on.
Before that, I was as confused as you were (in your first reply) about
how access_mode could be NULL (with the same reasoning).  In any case,
thanks for your links ; I did try searching the web for the answer
before posting, but got too many irrelevant results given that I had to
search using very common terms.

I've concluded the the RECORD type is the best-fit for my approach.  I
don't know if it's any faster that using SELECT * with a specific
%ROWTYPE given that the data doesn't go anywhere outside the function
body.  I don't know if the order in which columns are returned (by
either SELECT * or using explicit column names matters when using
%ROWTYPE), although I'll assume that PostgreSQL is smart enough to match
things up correctly, if I need to write a function that returns
instances of any given %ROWTYPE in the future.

Order does matter:

create table rowtype_test(id int, fld_1 varchar, fld_2 varchar);

insert into rowtype_test values (1, 'one', 'two');
insert into rowtype_test values (2, 'three', 'four');

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION row_type_test ( )
 RETURNS void
 LANGUAGE plpgsql

AS $function$
DECLARE
    r rowtype_test%rowtype;
BEGIN
    FOR r IN
        SELECT fld_1, id, fld_2 FROM rowtype_test
    LOOP
        RAISE NOTICE '%', r;
    END LOOP;
    RETURN;
END;
$function$
;


test=> select row_type_test();
ERROR:  invalid input syntax for integer: "one"
CONTEXT:  PL/pgSQL function row_type_test() line 5 at FOR over SELECT rows




Thanks again.
Christopher




--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com


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