> From: stan <stanb@xxxxxxxxx> > > I thought this would be common. But a quick Google only revealed what look to be workarounds. > > I am defining a bunch of functions, and I would prefer to store them in a separate file, which then gets "source" by the main DB init file. > > Is there a standard way to do this? Besides what the others have said, not if you stick to SQL. This is really more of an application level question where you have something that will do your init/load process. If you're willing to use other tools, then there are solutions. IIRC, your other thread had "#include" in the title. You could build a small file with: #include "function1.sql" #include "function2.sql" ... Then run it thru "cpp" and use the output of that. Might need some post-processing if you're unlucky; I'd have to try it to see if there are extraneous lines. Personally, I'd probably just have a shell script that goes into that dir and does something like: cat *.sql | psql -d DB # and other args and call it done...translate if you're not on a Unix-like system. I could write a Perl program to do it because Perl can do almost anything. ;) Your imagination is the limit. HTH, Kevin This e-mail transmission, and any documents, files or previous e-mail messages attached to it, may contain confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient, or a person responsible for delivering it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, distribution, review, copy or use of any of the information contained in or attached to this message is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. If you have received this transmission in error, please immediately notify us by reply e-mail, and destroy the original transmission and its attachments without reading them or saving them to disk. Thank you.