"Philippe Lang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is there a simple way of doing "kind of" a
> SELECT *, EVAL(f) FROM public.test;

> ... and having f evaluated as an expression, so that we get back:

> ------------------------------
> id   a     b    f        eval
> ------------------------------
> 1    2     3    a+b      5
> 2    12    3    a*b      36
> 3    5     6    a+2*b    17
> ------------------------------

Not really.  You can sort of approximate eval() with plpgsql's EXECUTE:

regression=# create or replace function eval(text) returns int as '
regression'# declare res record;
regression'# begin
regression'# for res in execute ''select '' || $1 || '' as result'' loop
regression'#   return res.result;
regression'# end loop;
regression'# end' language plpgsql;
CREATE FUNCTION
regression=#  select eval ('23+34');
 eval
------
   57
(1 row)

regression=#

but this has a problem with supporting more than one result type (hmm,
maybe you could fake that with 7.4's polymorphism?).  And I don't see
any way at all for the function to have access to the other values in
the row, as your example presumes it would do.

                        regards, tom lane

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