Hackers, I’ve been happily using the array-to-element concatenation operator || to append a single value to an array, e.g,
SELECT array || 'foo'; And it works great, including in PL/pgSQL functions, except in an exception block. When I run this: BEGIN; CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION foo( ) RETURNS BOOLEAN IMMUTABLE LANGUAGE PLPGSQL AS $$ DECLARE things TEXT[] := '{}'; BEGIN things := things || 'foo'; RAISE division_by_zero; EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN things := things || 'bar'; END; $$; SELECT foo(); ROLLBACK; The output is: psql:array.sql:15: ERROR: malformed array literal: "bar" LINE 1: SELECT things || 'bar' ^ DETAIL: Array value must start with "{" or dimension information. QUERY: SELECT things || 'bar' CONTEXT: PL/pgSQL function foo() line 8 at assignment Note that it’s fine with the use of || outside the exception block, but not inside! I’ve worked around this by using `things || '{bar}'` instead, but it seems like a bug or perhaps unforeseen corner case that appending a value to an array doesn’t work in an exception-handling block. Best, David
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