Denisa Cirstescu <denisa.cirstescu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > I want to COPY a value to STDOUT from PL/pgSQL language. You can't. Maybe RAISE NOTICE would serve the purpose? > I saw that the STDOUT is not accessible from PL/pgSQL, but it is from SQL. > This is why I am trying to create an auxiliary function declared as language SQL and call that function from my PL/pgSQL code. Oh, that's an oversight --- this case can't work either, but the SQL function code fails to prevent it. The COPY runs, but it completely breaks the wire protocol, leading to weird errors on the client side, eg regression=# create or replace function printToStdout(abc text) returns void as $$ copy (SELECT 42) to stdout; $$ language sql; CREATE FUNCTION regression=# select printToStdout('z'); 42 server sent data ("D" message) without prior row description ("T" message) regression=# What this should produce is an error similar to the one you get in plpgsql. COPY to stdout/from stdin can't be executed from inside an already-running query, because the wire protocol can't support nesting those operations. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general