I've got a case where I need to reverse strings, and find that, oddly enough, there isn't a C-based reverse() function.
A search turns up pl/pgsql and SQL implementations: create or replace function reverse_string(text) returns text as $$ DECLARE reversed_string text; incoming alias for $1; BEGIN reversed_string = ''''; for i in reverse char_length(incoming)..1 loop reversed_string = reversed_string || substring(incoming from i for 1); end loop; return reversed_string; END $$ language plpgsql; CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION reverse(TEXT) RETURNS TEXT AS $$ SELECT array_to_string( ARRAY ( SELECT substring($1, s.i,1) FROM generate_series(length($1), 1, -1) AS s(i) ), ''); $$ LANGUAGE SQL IMMUTABLE; Unfortunately, neither is particularly fast. This should be "blinding-quick" in C, in comparison; reversing a set of bytes should be able to be done mighty quick! (Aside: presumably we could walk thru the string destructively, in-place, swapping bytes; I think that would be theoretically quickest...) I could probably add this in as an SPI() function; is there a good reason to try to avoid doing so? -- output = reverse("ofni.sesabatadxunil" "@" "enworbbc") http://www3.sympatico.ca/cbbrowne/sgml.html "Consistency is the single most important aspect of *ideology.* Reality is not nearly so consistent." - <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers