čt 19. 1. 2023 v 16:54 odesílatel Pavel Stehule <pavel.steh...@gmail.com>
napsal:

>
>
> čt 19. 1. 2023 v 15:20 odesílatel 2903807...@qq.com <2903807...@qq.com>
> napsal:
>
>> Hello, thank you very much for your reply. But I think you may have
>> misunderstood what we have done.
>>
>> What we do this time is that we can use multiple range ranges
>> (condition_iterator) after in. Previously, we can only use such an interval
>> [lower, upper] after in, but in some scenarios, we may need a list: 
>> *condition_
>> iterator[,condition_iterator ...]*
>>
>> condition_iterator:
>> [ REVERSE ] expression .. expression [ BY expression ]
>>
>
> then you can use second outer for over an array or just while cycle
>

I wrote simple example:

create type range_expr as (r int4range, s int);

do
$$
declare re range_expr;
begin
  foreach re in array ARRAY[('[10, 20]', 1), ('[100, 200]', 10)]
  loop
    for i in lower(re.r) .. upper(re.r) by re.s
    loop
      raise notice '%', i;
    end loop;
  end loop;
end;
$$;

But just I don't know what is wrong on

begin
  for i in 10..20
  loop
    raise notice '%', i;
  end loop;

  for i in 100 .. 200 by 10
  loop
    raise notice '%', i;
  end loop;
end;

and if there are some longer bodies you should use function or procedure.
Any different cycle is separated. PLpgSQL (like PL/SQL or ADA) are verbose
languages. There is no goal to have short, heavy code.

Regards

Pavel

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