> > Is there any way to count how many hits I got in a cursor 
> in PL/pgsql? 
> > 
> > I have a function that will "window" through the result of 
> a (large) 
> > query based on two parameters, but I also want to return 
> the number of 
> > hits to the client. Right now I'm looping through the entire cursor 
> > and incrementing a local variable, which I later return (along with 
> > the first <n> records in the resultset) to the client. But 
> this seems 
> > horribly inefficient... I'd just like to ask "how many rows are in 
> > this cursor", is there a way to do that without looping 
> through them all?
> 
> You can move to the end, look at the row number, then move to 
> the beginning. It will still need to materialise the entire 
> resultset though.

How do I do that? remember this is a pL/pgsql cursor. From what I can
find at
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/static/plpgsql-cursors.html#PLPGSQL-C
URSOR-USING, I can only do FETCH to get the next row, or CLOSE. 

I can deal with materializing the resultset, but I want to get away from
the loop-a-thousand-times-doing-plus-one...

//Magnus

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