Search Postgresql Archives

Re: referencing other INSERT VALUES columns inside the insert

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 11/17/2015 01:14 AM, Geoff Winkless wrote:
On 16 November 2015 at 15:48, David G. Johnston
<david.g.johnston@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:david.g.johnston@xxxxxxxxx>>wrote:

    ​You don't need WITH to accomplish this...

    INSERT INTO test (c1, c2, c3)
    SELECT c1, c2, c1 * c2
    FROM ( VALUES (3, 7) ) vals (c1, c2);

    David J.


​Oh I see, so it's the ability to use VALUES in place of a SELECT,
really. I suppose I could equally have done

INSERT INTO test (c1,c2,c3) SELECT *, c1*c2 from (SELECT 3 c1,7 c2) tmp

Frustratingly, it still doesn't quite achieve what I needed (I
appreciate that was me not describing the full problem, mainly because I
hadn't realised that the code relied on it): on MySQL, I can do

INSERT INTO test (c1, c2, c4, c5) VALUES (3, 7, c1*c2, c4*c3)

and even though c3 isn't defined in the column list it will use the
default column value for the c4 calculation, while for c5 it uses the
value calculated for c4 in the previous field. I get that that isn't
defined ANSI behaviour and don't think there's a way to do either of
these things in PG, so I've fallen back to doing a single transaction
with one INSERT with the static values followed by one update for each
calculated value (obviously with a full PK for the WHERE clause...)

So

INSERT INTO test (c1, c2) VALUES (3, 7); UPDATE test SET c4=c1*c2 WHERE
c1=3; UPDATE test SET c5=c4*c3 WHERE c1=3;

Could the above not be shortened to?:

INSERT INTO test (c1, c2) VALUES (3, 7); UPDATE test SET c4=c1*c2, c5=c1*c2*c3 WHERE c1=3;

Also from your first post:
"To be clear, the SQL is generated dynamically based on data, ..."

Would it not be easier to just calculate the values in whatever program is generating the SQL and just supply the calculated values in the INSERT?

Lastly, and this is more about my curiosity then anything else, why calculate the values at all? You have the original values c1 and c2 the others can be derived at any time. I am just interested in what the benefit is to calculate them on initial data entry?


Not as neat (nor probably as efficient), and a bit of a pain to have to
include the PK each time, but does at least achieve what I need.

Thanks again for the insights, always good to learn something :)

Geoff


--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx


--
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general



[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Index of Archives]     [Postgresql Jobs]     [Postgresql Admin]     [Postgresql Performance]     [Linux Clusters]     [PHP Home]     [PHP on Windows]     [Kernel Newbies]     [PHP Classes]     [PHP Books]     [PHP Databases]     [Postgresql & PHP]     [Yosemite]
  Powered by Linux