Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:

> Seems like the only way to do that in the backend would be to find a way
> of slipping the function text past the lexer/parser entirely.  While I
> can imagine ways of doing that, I think it'd be a *whole* lot cleaner
> to fix things on the client side.
> 
> How do you feel about a psql hack that provides a "function definition"
> mode?  More generally it could be a mode to enter random text and have
> it be converted to an SQL literal string.  Perhaps
> 
>       psql=> create function foo (int) returns int as
>       psql-> \beginliteral
>       psql-LIT> begin
>       psql-LIT> x := $1;
>       psql-LIT> ...
>       psql-LIT> end;
>       psql-LIT> \endliteral
>       psql-> language plpgsql;
> 
> Essentially, \beginliteral and \endliteral each convert to a quote
> mark, and everywhere in between quotes and backslashes get doubled.
> We might want to specify that the leading and trailing newlines get
> dropped, too, though for function-definition applications that would
> not matter.

Tom --

Given that 98% of my function defining is done is psql, this would be fine for me and 
solve my frustrations. It wouldn't help people that build functions in scripting 
languages or non-psql environments, however, but I don't know how common this is.

What do others think?

Thanks!
-- 

Joel BURTON | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | joelburton.com | aim: wjoelburton
Knowledge Management & Technology Consultant 



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