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> The above is an operation that would not help me a lot, but a way of
> performing currval() without knowing the sequence name would be good.
You could do this with a function. Here is a quick one in SQL:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION seqname(NAM
Christopher Kings-Lynne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is there demand for this syntax:
>
> ALTER SEQUENCE ON table(col) CYCLE 100;
What if the values in a column are generated via a sequence that was
created independently -- i.e. it's not a SERIAL column?
I'm not very enthusiastic about features
On Mon, 2003-11-24 at 01:07, Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there demand for this syntax:
>
> ALTER SEQUENCE ON table(col) CYCLE 100;
>
> It would allow us to become sequence-name independent...
I think the right approach to this problem would be to implement
IDENTITIES and GENERAT
Is there demand for this syntax:
ALTER SEQUENCE ON table(col) CYCLE 100;
It would allow us to become sequence-name independent...
The above is an operation that would not help me a lot, but a way of
performing currval() without knowing the sequence name would be good.
It will help in cases suc
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote:
> Is there demand for this syntax:
>
> ALTER SEQUENCE ON table(col) CYCLE 100;
>
> It would allow us to become sequence-name independent...
The above is an operation that would not help me a lot, but a way of
performing currval() without know
Hi,
Is there demand for this syntax:
ALTER SEQUENCE ON table(col) CYCLE 100;
It would allow us to become sequence-name independent...
Chris
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