Thanks Peter!
I'll take a close look at your suggestion when I get a chance. But I've
already implemented a Python script that solves my actual problem based on
the pattern that Alvaro Herrera suggested for the toy problem I described
here. It's working very well to reproduce the farm with sever
On 2023-10-05 09:59:24 -0500, Ron wrote:
> But honestly, the amount of text duplication hurts my "inner programmer".
> And it would have to be generated dynamically, since you don't know how many
> crops were delivered. #shudder
Yes, this seems like the kind of problem that I would definitely so
But honestly, the amount of text duplication hurts my "inner programmer".
And it would have to be generated dynamically, since you don't know how many
crops were delivered. #shudder
On 10/5/23 09:33, Dow Drake wrote:
Yes! Thanks, Alvaro! This is exactly the pattern I was trying to work out
Yes! Thanks, Alvaro! This is exactly the pattern I was trying to work out!
This community is awesome!
> On Oct 5, 2023, at 2:39 AM, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
>
> On 2023-Oct-04, Dow Drake wrote:
>
>> I want to insert a farm record, then insert two crops associated with that
>> farm, then inser
On 2023-Oct-04, Dow Drake wrote:
> I want to insert a farm record, then insert two crops associated with that
> farm, then insert two deliveries for each of the the two crops so that in
> the end, my tables look like this:
If I understand you correctly, for each table you want one CTE with the
da
Have you considered writing a stored procedure to process records that have
been written to temporary tables?
0. Create temporary tables tmp_farms, tmp_crops and tmp_deliveries, which
don't have id columns.
1. Truncate the three temporary tables
2. Insert into the temp tables a "set" of prod d
I see. That would definitely work, but part of this for me is to get a
better understanding of PostgreSQL's capabilities. I'm going to keep
working on a minimal solution that deletes no records from the dev
database, and only inserts the required records.
On Wed, Oct 4, 2023 at 6:58 PM Ron wrot
Ah. We'd truncate all of the dev tables, then load a "slice" (for example,
accounts 1 to 1, and all associated records from downstream tables;
lots and lots of views!!) from the prod database.
On 10/4/23 20:50, Dow Drake wrote:
Thanks for the reply, Ron!
I'm not sure I see how to make
Thanks for the reply, Ron!
I'm not sure I see how to make your suggestion work, though. Suppose I
dump the three tables to CSV as you suggest (and write a script to extract
the relevant records from those CSV dumps in the correct order). It might
be that in the dev database, the next generated ke
Frame challenge: why can't you just "\copy to" the dev database tables in
the correct order, to satisfy foreign key requirements?
On 10/4/23 18:59, Dow Drake wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to write a postgresql script to replicate a hierarchical
structure in a live database into my development databas
Hi,
I'm trying to write a postgresql script to replicate a hierarchical
structure in a live database into my development database, where I can
debug and test more easily. I can extract the data from the live database
that needs to be inserted, but I'm having trouble writing the insertion
script
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