2013/3/14 Alexander Farber <alexander.far...@gmail.com>:
> Thank you -
>
> On Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 10:40 AM, Ian Lawrence Barwick
> <barw...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> I also have an INSERT trigger on my table,
>>> can I return a NULL from it or something similar?
>>
>> Yes, if you test for the presence of the word you can return NULL
>> and the row will be discarded. See example below.
>>
>>
>> testdb=# CREATE TABLE foo (word TEXT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY);
>> NOTICE:  CREATE TABLE / PRIMARY KEY will create implicit index
>> "foo_pkey" for table "foo"
>> CREATE TABLE
>> testdb=#
>> testdb=# INSERT INTO foo VALUES('bar'),('baz');
>> INSERT 0 2
>> testdb=# INSERT INTO foo VALUES('bar');
>> ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint "foo_pkey"
>> DETAIL:  Key (word)=(bar) already exists.
>>
>>
>> CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION foo_check()
>>   RETURNS TRIGGER
>>   LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'
>> AS
>> $$
>>   BEGIN
>>     PERFORM TRUE
>>       FROM foo
>>      WHERE word = NEW.word;
>>     IF FOUND THEN
>>       RETURN NULL;
>>     END IF;
>>     RETURN NEW;
>>   END;
>> $$;
>>
>> CREATE TRIGGER tr_foo_check
>>   BEFORE INSERT ON foo
>>   FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE foo_check();
>>
>> testdb=# INSERT INTO foo VALUES('bar');
>> INSERT 0 0
>
> so the return value of an insert trigger
> is actually what get's inserted?

Yup, normally that would be the contents of the NEW record.

> And it has to be an BEFORE trigger?

Yes, because an AFTER trigger is fired after the row is updated, so
the row can't be changed.

Regards

Ian Barwick


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