On Aug 6, 2010, at 10:49 PM, Pavel Stehule wrote: >> Huh? You can select into an array: > > and pg doesn't handle 2D arrays well - can't to use ARRAY(subselect) > constructor for 2D arrays
Right. >> try=# select ARRAY(SELECT ARRAY[k,v] FROM foo); >> ERROR: could not find array type for datatype text[] > > try SELECT ARRAY(SELECT row(k,v) FROM foo) Yeah, but those aren't nested arrays., They're…well, they're ordered pairs. ;-P > sure, but it isn't relevant here - the problem is buildin output > functions for datatypes. For example - true is different formated in > PostgresSQL and different formated in xml or JSON. Date values are > differently formated in JSON and XML. So if you would to correctly > format some date type value and if your interface is only text - then > you have to cast value back to binary and format it again. More - if > you have a information about original data type, you can use a corect > format. So if you use a only text parameters, then you lost a > significant information (when some parameter are not text). For > example, if I have only text interface for some hypothetical JSON API, > then I am not able to show a boolean value correctly - because it > doesn't use a quoting - and it is string and isn't number. Point. FWIW, though, this is already an issue for non-SQL functions. PL/Perl, for example, gets all arguments cast to text, AFAICT: try=# create or replace function try(bool) returns text language plperl AS 'shift'; CREATE FUNCTION Time: 121.403 ms try=# select try(true); try ----- t (1 row) I wish this wasn't so. > There is some other issue - PLpgSQL can't to work well with untyped > collections. But it isn't problem for C custom functions, and there > are not any reason why we can't to support polymorphic collections > (+/- because these collection cannot be accessed from PLpgSQL > directly). I completely agree with you here. I'd love to be able to support RECORD arguments to non-C functions. >> I agree that it's not as sugary as pairs would be. But I admit to having no >> problem with >> >> SELECT foo(ARRAY[ ['foo', 'bar'], ['baz', 'yow']]); >> >> But maybe I'm biased, since there's a lot of that sort of syntax in pgTAP.. >> > > Yes, when you are a author of code, you know what you are wrote. But > when you have do some review? Then an reviewer have to look on > definition of foo, and he has to verify, if you are use a parameters > well. For two params I don't see on first view what system you used - > [[key,key],[value,value]] or [[key,value],[key, value]]. More you have > to use a nested data structure - what is less readable then variadic > parameters. And - in pg - you are lost information about original data > types. Valid points. I agree that it would be nicer to use RECORDs: SELECT foo( row('foo', 1), row('bar', true)); Certainly much clearer. But given that we've gone round and round on allowing non-C functions to use ROWs and gotten nowhere, I don't know that we'll get any further now. But can you not create a C function that allows a signature of VARIADIC RECORD? Best, David -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers