On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 12:53 PM, Andreas Kretschmer <akretschmer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Kenneth Tilton <ktilton@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Bit of a trigger NOOB Q: >> >> I am trying to use a trigger function to automatically populate new >> rows in a table with a public ID of the form YYYY-NNN such that the >> 42nd row created in 2011 would get the ID "2011-042". Each row is >> associated via an iasid column with a row in an audit table that has a >> timestamp column called created. This works OK, but I am worried about >> two rows getting the same case_no if they come in at the same time >> (whatever that means): >> >> declare >> case_yr integer; >> yr_case_count bigint; >> begin >> select date_part('year', created) into case_yr >> from audit >> where audit.sid = NEW.iasid; >> >> select count(*) into yr_case_count >> from fwa_case, audit >> where fwa_case.iasid=audit.sid >> and date_part('year', created) = case_yr; >> >> NEW.case_no = to_char( case_yr, '9999' ) || '-' || >> to_char(1+yr_case_count, 'FM000'); >> return NEW; >> end; > > If i where you, i would not use such a column. What happens if you > insert/delete a record? We only do logical deletes. Not sure what you mean about inserts -- that is what I am working on, and they always should get the next highest sequence number in a year. > > I would use something like to_char(row_number() over (...),'FM000') to > count while select. Unfortunately it must be within the year, not overall. -kt -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general