Hello list
I am trying to write a function in c that would 'merge' two tables together.
The idea is that we insert rows from one table to another, and if there is a
constraint violation, update the old row with the new row. I have done this
succesfully with plpgsql, but alas, the tables are so b
On Feb 18, 2008, at 12:10 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
Would it have been reasonable to expect some kind of notice or warning
message stating that 'position' was special, and
position would be used instead?
The way you phrase that makes me think you misunderstand what's
happening here. The name of th
Max,
we use contrib/hstore specially designed for such kind of problem. It's a
sort of perl's hash, where you can store all specific properties.
In that way, your table will looks like
create table objects ( id integer, x real, y real, , props hstore)
Here '...' designates other mandator
Tim Hart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> At the time I executed the statement
> create type position as enum('pitcher', 'catcher', 'first base',
> 'second base', 'third base', 'short stop', 'left field', 'center
> field', 'right field', 'designated hitter', 'pinch hitter');
> Would it have been r
On Feb 17, 2008, at 11:21 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
The reason "position" is special is that the SQL spec calls out weird
specialized syntax for it:
Given the spec, I completely understand.
Given the roundabout way I discovered the nature of the problem, I'm
curious:
At the time I executed the
The GROUP BY was the fastest method.
Thanks for the suggestions,
Keaton
On 2/15/08 3:12 PM, "Gregory Stark" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Keaton Adams" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Version: Postgres 8.1.4
>> Platform: RHEL
>>
>> Given this scenario with the indexes in place, when I ask
Tim Hart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Feb 17, 2008, at 10:41 PM, Chris wrote:
> It's a string manipulation function:
> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/functions-string.html
> If the issue were simply that it were a function name, than I would
> have expected that attempting to
On Feb 17, 2008, at 10:41 PM, Chris wrote:
Chris wrote:
I'm just toying around, so this isn't high priority. I'll probably
change the name of the enum to fielding_position for clarity's sake
anyway. But for my own education - what's so unique about the name
'position'?
It's a string mani
On Feb 17, 2008, at 21:24 , Tim Hart wrote:
But for my own education - what's so unique about the name 'position'?
It's an SQL keyword:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/sql-keywords-
appendix.html
Michael Glaesemann
grzm seespotcode net
---(end of
Chris wrote:
I'm just toying around, so this isn't high priority. I'll probably
change the name of the enum to fielding_position for clarity's sake
anyway. But for my own education - what's so unique about the name
'position'?
It's a string manipulation function:
http://www.postgresql.org/
I'm just toying around, so this isn't high priority. I'll probably
change the name of the enum to fielding_position for clarity's sake
anyway. But for my own education - what's so unique about the name
'position'?
It's a string manipulation function:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/inter
I answered my own question. Should have waited another 5 minutes before
composing the e-mail.
This page:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/sql-keywords-
appendix.html
States that 'POSITION' is non-reserved, but cannot be a function or
type. Slightly confusing as stated - I ap
I was playing around with the enum type today. I was toying around with
a schema to model information about baseball, and decided to create an
enum named position:
tjhart=# create type position as enum('pitcher', 'catcher', 'first
base', 'second base', 'third base', 'short stop', 'left field',
I would like to store very large data into one column, which contains
my own data structure and memory layout. The data will be more than
500M bytes.
I just wrote like:
Datum myfunc(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS){
/* here get my data, allocated ~ 500M data */
...
/* allocate more than 500M */
bytea *
> Thanks for your reply.
> I think ther are no error in 7.4.3 but warning.
That means the character in question was ignored in 7.4, i.e. the
character was skipped. I'm not sure that's actually what you want.
> I used the old version 7.4.3 postgresql for 3 years with
> UTF-8 encoding web base fron
On 2/17/08, Maxim Khitrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So the scenario is this. We have two projects starting that will deal
> heavily with mapping spatial regions. One of the reasons I'm looking
> at PostgreSQL is the PostGIS extension that may help us in dealing
> with all the geometry.
>From yo
On 2/17/08, Maxim Khitrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The simplest design would be to create two tables, one for nodes
> another for edges, and create a column for every possible property.
> This, however, is huge waste of space, since there will not be a
> single node or edge that will make use o
Willy-Bas Loos wrote:
ah, of course.
the exclusive lock was preventing tty1 to read "test", and when the lock
was gone, so was the table.
I get it. Thanks a lot.
But, what about the "ERROR: tuple concurrently updated" ? (in TTY3)
Same thing - tty1 was locking that entry and when it was relea
Greetings everyone,
I'm fairly new to PostgreSQL, but I'm currently doing some research on
tools to be used for an upcoming project and could really use your
help with a possible database design.
So the scenario is this. We have two projects starting that will deal
heavily with mapping spatial re
I've such beast:
select
sm.ShipMethodID as _ShipMethodID,
sm.Name as _Name, sm.Description as _Description from
(
select sum(bi.qty) as N, sum(i.peso) as W,
sum(i.price*bi.qty) as _price
from shop_commerce_baskets b
join shop_commerce_basket_items bi on bi.basketid=b.basketid
joi
Stefan Niantschur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Am Sun, 17 Feb 2008 09:17:08 -0500
> schrieb Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> Hardly surprising when you're printing the string into a fixed-size
>> 8K buffer. The buffer overflow is smashing the stack, in particular
>> the function's return address.
Yes, I know, but the backend does not allow for a bigger buffer. Trying
> to use a 80K (char[81920])buffer did not work and returns:
> INFO: string-size : 48015
> INFO: +++
> server closed the connection unexpectedly
>This probably means the server terminated abnor
Am Sun, 17 Feb 2008 09:17:08 -0500
schrieb Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Stefan Niantschur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > So far I have been successfully doing calls to SPI, select the data
> > from the table and return it. However, this works only with string
> > not larger than page size of c
Tom Lane wrote:
Stefan Niantschur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
So far I have been successfully doing calls to SPI, select the data from the
table and return it. However, this works only with string not larger than
page size of char[8192].
The strings I expect are much longer and this causes the
Stefan Niantschur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> So far I have been successfully doing calls to SPI, select the data from the
> table and return it. However, this works only with string not larger than
> page size of char[8192].
> The strings I expect are much longer and this causes the backend to
Em Friday 15 February 2008 12:36:37 Adam Rich escreveu:
> > I would instead queue messages (or suitable information about them) in
> > a table, and have a process outside PostgreSQL periodically poll for them
>
> Why poll when you can wait?
>
> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/interactive/sql-not
Hi all,
I want to write a function in C which retrieves a large string from a table,
does some work on it and returns the result to the surrounding SELECT.
(e.g. SELECT my_c_func(text);)
So far I have been successfully doing calls to SPI, select the data from the
table and return it. However,
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