Thanks, that is working.  How then do I get back a dictionary of all final
column values?

-Tim


On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 11:12 AM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain <[email protected]>wrote:

> On Wed, 16 Sep 2009 09:29:52 -0400
> Tim Callaghan <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Need help.  I'm trying to do a simple insert and want to use the
> > .insert so I get back my bigserial column, table definition is as
> > follows:
> ...
> > import pg
> > db = pg.connect('testdb','localhost',-1,None,None,'testuser','testpw')
>
> Use the class:
>  db = pg.DB(...
>
> > dictDB = {}
> > updValues = {'job_id':'job-id-0001', 'job_name':'job-name-0001'}
> > print db.insert(t_job',dictDB,updValues)
>
> Too many arguments.  Use this:
>
>  print db.insert(t_job', updValues)
>
> --
> D'Arcy J.M. Cain
> PyGreSQL Development Group
> http://www.PyGreSQL.org
>
_______________________________________________
PyGreSQL mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.vex.net/mailman/listinfo/pygresql

Reply via email to