Amazing what a bracket can do :) Thanks for the help. >>> Richard Huxton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2007-09-04 12:45 >>> Bart Degryse wrote: > I'm trying to use a delete statement with returning clause in a function:
> FOR rec IN ( > delete from billing_errors_new where errortypeid IN (1,2) returning *) > LOOP > I get following error though: > ERROR: syntax error at or near "delete" at character 4 > QUERY: ( delete from billing_errors_new where errortypeid IN (1,2) > returning *) > CONTEXT: SQL statement in PL/PgSQL function "test_delete" near line 5 > > According to the manual (I think) it should be possible: I think it's just the brackets () - plpgsql's parser isn't terribly sophisticated. This works for me, but with brackets doesn't. BEGIN; CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE test1 (a integer, b text); INSERT INTO test1 SELECT generate_series(1,100) AS a, 'text for b'; CREATE FUNCTION testdel() RETURNS integer AS $$ DECLARE n integer; r RECORD; BEGIN n := 0; FOR r IN DELETE FROM test1 WHERE a % 10 = 1 RETURNING * LOOP n := n + 1; END LOOP; RETURN n; END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql; SELECT testdel(); ROLLBACK; -- Richard Huxton Archonet Ltd ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: You can help support the PostgreSQL project by donating at http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate