Hello,
I'm building a DSL in Clojure for SQL and specifically PostgreSQL
[1]. When building a SQL statement that contains a function call
I always quote the function name with \" in case the function
name contains any special characters. Here's an example:
(select db ['(upper "x")])
;=> ["SELECT \"upper\"(?)" "x"]
This worked fine so far, but today I found a case that doesn't
work as expected, the COALESCE function.
(select db ['(coalesce nil 0)])
;=> ["SELECT \"coalesce\"(NULL, 0)"]
Can someone explain to me what's the difference between quoting
the `upper` and the `coalesce` function? I can execute the
following statements via psql, and it works as expected:
SELECT upper ('x');
SELECT "upper"('x');
SELECT coalesce(NULL, 1);
But as soon as I try this with `coalesce` I get an error:
SELECT "coalesce"(NULL, 1);
ERROR: function coalesce(unknown, integer) does not exist
LINE 1: SELECT "coalesce"(NULL, 1);
^
HINT: No function matches the given name and argument types. You might need to add explicit type casts.
What I found so far is, that the `upper` function can be found in
the `pg_proc` table but not `coalesce`.
SELECT proname FROM pg_proc WHERE proname ILIKE 'upper';
SELECT proname FROM pg_proc WHERE proname ILIKE 'coalesce';
Does this mean that `coalesce` isn't a classical function and I
shouldn't quote it? Is it instead a keyword, as described in
the "Lexical Structure" section of the docs [2]? How can I find
out which other functions are not meant to be quoted?
I'm aware that I do not need to quote the `coalesce` and `upper`
functions and I may change my strategy for quoting functions names.
Thanks for you help, Roman.