As I wrote before you will have to define your fields when querying the function, eg. select * from myfunction() as ("field1" integer, "field2" text, ...) So suppose you have a table like this CREATE TABLE sometable ( "id" serial, "sometextfield" text, "aninteger" int, "andavarchar" varchar(20) ); you would have to query the function below like this: select * from myfunction() as ("id" integer, "sometextfield" text, "aninteger" integer, "andavarchar" varchar); You are however not obliged to use the same fieldnames as defined in the table definition, so this will work too: select * from myfunction() as ("myid" integer, "textfield" text, "myint" integer, "varfield" varchar); Automatic type conversion will work too, so this is ok too select * from myfunction() as ("myid" integer, "textfield" text, "myint" integer, "varfield" text); Now suppose you change the selecte statement in myfunction to SELECT sometextfield, andavarchar FROM sometable WHERE id > 5 Now myfunction will not return 4 fields but only 2 and thus you would query myfunction like this select * from myfunction() as ("sometextfield" text, "andavarchar" varchar); or select * from myfunction() as ("textfield" text, "varfield" varchar); or select * from myfunction() as ("textfield" text, "varfield" text); So defining your function as RETURNS SETOF RECORD only postpones the moment you define your output fields. Either you define your output fields when creating your function, or (like in the above example) when querying your function. >>> "maria s" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2008-06-03 15:12 >>> Hi Bart, I will not know the number of fields. Because it will vary . Is there any solution for this?
Thanks, Maria >>> "maria s" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2008-06-03 15:01 >>> Hi Friends, Thanks for all your for the reply. I tried the function and when I execute it using select * from myfunction() it says ERROR: a column definition list is required for functions returning "record" Could you please help me to fix this error? Thanks so much for your help. -maria On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 3:06 AM, Bart Degryse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi Maria, Try something like CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION myfunction() RETURNS SETOF RECORD AS $body$ DECLARE rec record; BEGIN FOR rec IN ( SELECT * FROM sometable) LOOP RETURN NEXT rec; END LOOP; RETURN; END; $body$ LANGUAGE 'plpgsql' VOLATILE; As you can see, the number and type of the output fields only depends on whatever table you query in the FOR loop. It's not magic though. It just postpones defining the number and type of the output fields until querying the function. You will have to define the output fields when querying your function, like select * from myfunction() as ("field1" integer, "field2" text, ...) >>> "maria s" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2008-06-02 22:40 >>> Hi friends, I am very new to plsql. I have to write a function that quries few tables and returns a resultset of varying column. In that case I cannot predefine the table with column. If I use RETURNS SETOF then I should know the number of columns and its type?! Is there anyway to return a resultset with any number of column? Thanks for your help. -maria