On Wed, 16 Aug 2000, Stephan Szabo wrote on [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
(sorry for the crossposting, just to tell the list that I now switched to
the right one hopefully)

> I think the thing is that most people don't have basic examples, they
Perhaps someone knows one nice doc.  I only found some hints for
ma problems in the PGSQL-Part of the Bruce Momjian book.  But
may be PGSQL is in fact the thing I want and so I may possibly stick to
that.  Now here is the first question about that:

web=# create function atTest ( varchar )
web-#   returns bool
web-#   As ' BEGIN
web'#     Select * From Mitarbeiter Where FName = $1 ;
web'#     IF NOT FOUND THEN
web'#       RETURN ''f'' ;
web'#     ELSE
web'#       RETURN ''t'' ;
web'#     END IF ;
web'#   END; '
web-#   language 'plpgsql' ;
CREATE
web=# SELECT attest ( 'Tille' ) ;
ERROR:  unexpected SELECT query in exec_stmt_execsql()
web=# 

Could somebody enlighten me, what here goes wrong?

> have whatever things they particularly needed.  However, there
> are a couple defined in the create_function_2 regression test.
Thanks for your hint.  I tried to check these examples, but found that
setof beast is not well documented.

I tested kind of this
> CREATE FUNCTION hobbies(person)
>    RETURNS setof hobbies_r 
>    AS 'select * from hobbies_r where person = $1.name'
>    LANGUAGE 'sql';
But it returns just did:


web=# SELECT my_test ( ) ;

 ?column?  
-----------
 136437368
 136437368
 136437368
 ...

I had the hope to get the contents of the table like if I would
do 'SELECT * FROM table;'

Also kind of

   RETURNS SETOF varchar
   AS ' SELECT * FROM table ; '

doesn't do the trick, because this is syntactical wrong.

To explain what I'm intendet to do:  I want to port some servlets
from MS-SQL to PostgreSQL.  The servlets contain code like:

    rs = stmt.executeQuery("stored_procedure arg1, arg2");
    while ( rs.next() ) 
      do_something(rs.getString("col1"), rs.getString("col2"), 
                   rs.getString("col3"), rs.getString("col4") );

So I have to serve my servlet with any kind of datasets and I really
can't imagine, that such a basic task isn't possible with PostgeSQL.

Kind regards

         Andreas.


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