OUps,
I forget another strategy I used :
instead of having
testp2(es employee[])
testp2(es employee[])
you can use
testp2( names text[], salaries integer[], ages integer[])
This might be the solution with the less work, but it is absolutely terrible practice,
because it will be hard to change you record type (evolution difficult)
, and having many columns will make you create function with many arguments,
, and having many columns will make you create function with many arguments,
which is often a bad idea.
Cheers,
Rémi-C
2015-06-02 10:36 GMT+02:00 Rémi Cura <remi.cura@xxxxxxxxx>:
Hey,the only straight workaround I know (which is pretty bad)is to cast down your record to text.Then you have an array of text, which is manageable.For this you can either 'flatten' your record into a unique text,or cast each part of your record to text, then emulate an array of array (you need to know the length of the inner array in your function though).I used this to emulate a 2D numpy vector (N*3)(for numpy).The other more sane solution is to pass the information about the row you want to retrieve, and retrieve the row directly within the python.For instance, here you would pass an array of id of the employee you want to work with.This is saner, but as a design I don't really like to have specific SQL code into a generic python function.
I agree it is cumbersome, and I also badly miss more powerful input for python function (after all, plpython can already return composite types, which is awesome)Cheers,Rémi-C2015-06-02 2:44 GMT+02:00 Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>:On 06/01/2015 07:42 AM, Filipe Pina wrote:
Thanks for the reply anyway, it's a pity though, it'd be useful..
Another bump I've found along the pl/python road: insert ROWTYPE in table..
Maybe you have some hint on that? :)
So, in PLPGSQL I can:
DECLARE
my_var my_table;
BEGIN
my_var.col1 := 'asd';
INSERT INTO my_table VALUES(my_table.*);
END;
How would I do something like that in pl/python?
First, how to declare a ROW-TYPE variable, as they're all python mappings?
my_var = { 'col1': 'asd' } enough? it'd would miss all the other columns...
Second, how to insert it?
plpy.prepare and .execute say they don't support composite types, so I
cannot simply pass
pl = plpy.prepare('INSERT INTO core_customer VALUES ($1)', ['my_table'])
Any workarounds for this? (meaning I wouldn't have to specify any
columns in the insert statement)
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.4/interactive/sql-insert.html
pl = plpy.prepare('INSERT INTO core_table SELECT * FROM my_table')
Thanks
On Sex, Mai 29, 2015 at 2:00 , Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 5/18/15 10:52 AM, Filipe Pina wrote:
But one of the functions I need to create needs to accept an array
of records.
PL/Python doesn't support that. Some more code needs to be written to
support that. You did everything correctly. I don't know of a good
workaround.
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx
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