=?iso-8859-1?Q?g=FCnter_strubinsky?= <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Sorry, wrong copy!
Okay, looking more closely, you've got two problems here: > CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION public.norm(int8, record) > RETURNS int8 AS > ... > LANGUAGE 'plpgsql' VOLATILE; plpgsql functions don't support inputs declared as type "record"; you have to use a more specific type name. norm() would have failed at runtime had you ever gotten that far. > declare > currec record; > ... > select norm(catrec.cat1,currec) into dmy; plpgsql also doesn't support passing whole record variables into SQL commands. The error message about this is unhelpful :-(. (I just improved the message in CVS tip, but actually making it work seems like a much larger project...) In this particular case I think you can end-run around it by not importing the row into plpgsql at all. Can't you combine select * into currec from denorm where theKey=catrec.cat1; select norm(catrec.cat1,currec) into dmy; into select norm(catrec.cat1,denorm.*) into dmy from denorm where theKey=catrec.cat1; This should work if norm()'s second argument is declared as type "denorm" (equivalent to denorm%rowtype). If you don't want to tie norm() to the denorm row type, you'll need to pass in the values it needs as separate scalars. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match