On Wed, 2005-11-23 at 23:23 -0500, Ken Winter wrote:
> In PL/pgSQL, is there a way to put a *variable* column-name in a dot
> notation reference to a RECORD column?
> 
> For example, suppose I want to write a function like the following, which is
> to be called by a "BEFORE INSERT" trigger:
> 
> CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION foo (  ) RETURNS TRIGGER AS 
>     '
>     DECLARE 
>         var VARCHAR;
>     BEGIN
>         var := TG_ARGV[0]       
>         NEW.<the column whose name is the value of var> := ''whatever'';
>         RETURN NEW;     
>     END;
>     '
>     LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'
> ;
> 
> The aim of this uninteresting function is to assign the value 'whatever' to
> the table column that is passed in by the calling trigger as TG_ARGV[0],
> i.e. the first calling argument.  
> 
> What I don't know is what to put into the dot notation in place of ".<the
> column whose name is the value of var>" so that the column of NEW that is
> addressed by the assignment statement is the one passed in as the first
> argument.  Is there any PL/pgSQL construct that could be substituted in here
> to achieve this result?

Unfortunately not.

> If not, can anybody suggest a way to write a trigger-called function that
> would accomplish the same result?

You would have to do something like:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION foo() RETURNS TRIGGER AS 
    $$
    DECLARE 
        var VARCHAR;
    BEGIN
        var := TG_ARGV[0];
        IF var = 'column_1' THEN
            NEW.column_1 = 'whatever';
        ELSIF var = 'column_2' THEN
            NEW.column_2 = 'whatever';
        ...
        END IF;
        RETURN NEW;
   END;
   $$
   LANGUAGE plpgsql;

Oliver Elphick


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