Here's an example using plperl and global variables. The variables are
local to a session so you don't have to worry about the counters
interfering. If you need two counters in a session, just execute
reset_counter().

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION reset_counter() RETURNS INT AS $$
$_SHARED{counter} = 0;
return 0;
$$ LANGAUGE plperl;

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION counter() RETURNS INT AS $$
return $_SHARED{counter}++;
$$ LANGUAGE plperl;

Now, you can execute the queries just like you want:
select counter(),a,b from foo;

There are a couple trivial issues, like you can start from 1 instead of
0 if you want.

Regards,
        Jeff Davis


On Fri, 2005-02-25 at 16:44 -0600, josue wrote:
> Hello list,
> 
> is there a way return a column with the row number automatically 
> generated according the way the rows were processed by the query.
> 
> For instance:
> select a,b from foo;
> a  b
> 20 yes
> 40 no
> 15 yes
> 
> to something like:
> 
> select counter(),a,b from foo;
> counter a  b
> 1     20 yes
> 2     40 no
> 3     15 yes
> 
> Thanks in advance,
> 
> 


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TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your
      joining column's datatypes do not match

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