Jeroen T. Vermeulen wrote: > Well, except prepared statements apparently; I'm not sure why they are an > exception. > > When I say "within a transaction" as opposed to outside a transaction, I > mean of course an explicit transaction. If you want a prepared statement > to last throughout the session, I'd say it stands to reason that you > create it outside a transaction--in unfettered session context, so to > speak. I can't see how that would be either less intuitive or harder to > program in the client.
I disagree. Lots of people use prepared statements for all kinds of different reasons. A large percentage of them do not need or make use of explicit transactions. Having to continually rebuild the statement would be a hassle. The caching mechanism also seems like extra work for little result (to be fair, I like the idea of multiple backends being able to make use of the same plan). Generic routines can just always wrap the prepare statement in a subtransaction, which now allows safety until such time that a create or replace version becomes available, Merlin p.s. Is this correct behavior? A DROP TABLE gives a missing oid error which is fine, but I don't like this much: cpc=# create table test (a int, b int, c int); CREATE TABLE cpc=# prepare p (int) as select * from test; PREPARE cpc=# execute p(0); a | b | c ---+---+--- (0 rows) cpc=# alter table test drop column a; ALTER TABLE cpc=# execute p(0); a | b | c ---+---+--- (0 rows) ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html