On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 5:00 PM Thomas Kellerer <shammat@xxxxxxx> wrote:
jian he schrieb am 15.05.2023 um 10:33:
>
> function idea.
> allow function calling using the default keyword for any of the input arguments.
>
> example: https://dbfiddle.uk/FQwnfdmm
> So something like this "SELECT * FROM customer_orders(2579927, 'order_placed_on DESC', default, 2);"
> should work.
You can use named parameters when calling the function, that will use the default value for those not mentioned:
SELECT *
FROM customer_orders(_customer_id => 2579927,
_sort_field_and_direction => 'order_placed_on DESC',
_offset => 2);
select proname
,proargtypes
,pg_get_expr(pp.proargdefaults,0,true)
,pronargdefaults
from pg_proc pp
where pp.proname = 'customer_orders';
,proargtypes
,pg_get_expr(pp.proargdefaults,0,true)
,pronargdefaults
from pg_proc pp
where pp.proname = 'customer_orders';
----------return-------------
proname | customer_orders
proargtypes | 23 25 23 23 1082 1082pg_get_expr | 10, 0, CURRENT_DATE - 30, CURRENT_DATE
pronargdefaults | 4
table insert works, i guess because pg_attribute has column ordinal number (left to right).
but pg_proc only counts the number of arguments that have a default value.