On Thu, Nov 01, 2001 at 04:48:29PM +0000, Edward Grabczewski wrote: > > DROP FUNCTION threedpoint (float,float,float, float,float,float); > CREATE FUNCTION threedpoint (float,float,float,float,float,float) > RETURNS text > AS 'DECLARE > x1 ALIAS FOR $1; > y1 ALIAS FOR $2; > z1 ALIAS FOR $3; > x2 ALIAS FOR $4; > y2 ALIAS FOR $5; > z2 ALIAS FOR $6; > BEGIN > INSERT INTO rtest(xz,yz,xy) > VALUES ( \'(0,2), (1,3)\', > \'(1,2), (2,3)\', > \'(0,1), (1,2)\'); > RETURN null; > END;' > LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'; > > SELECT threedpoint(100,200,300,400,500,600);
Why do you pass all those variables to the function if you don't use them? It doesn't make any sense to me. As the documentation for PL/pgSQL clearly states with several examples, you have to double the quotes in strings> INSERT INTO rtest(xz,yz,xy) VALUES (''(0,2), (1,3)'', ''(1,2), (2,3)'', ''(0,1), (1,2)''); I don't know if the \' way of escaping quotes works. I never tried within a PL/pgSQL function. My guess is that it doesn't. -Roberto -- +----| http://fslc.usu.edu USU Free Software & GNU/Linux Club |------+ Roberto Mello - Computer Science, USU - http://www.brasileiro.net http://www.sdl.usu.edu - Space Dynamics Lab, Developer My inferiority complexes aren't as good as yours. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly