What I have is data with two different characters for "start quote"
and "end quote". In my case it's '[' and ']', but it could be
anything from "smart quotes", to parentheses, to brackets, braces, ^/$
in regexps, etc. I think this isn't too unreasonable a feature to
have to make copy more functi
binCBkunvbw8I.bin
Description:
KÖPFERL Robert wrote:
>I'm a little bit perplexed now... is it really the case that pre 8.0 systems
>aren't able to change col-types?
I would guess that the column type altering code is just short hand
for creating a new column of the correct type, copying the old column
into the new one, deleting
Kaloyan Iliev Iliev wrote:
>select test.name
>from test
>where test.name = foo.name
>having max(test.date)
I don't think you use the "having" clause like you've done there. I
think you want to be doing something more like:
select test.name
from test
where test.name = foo.name
and t
Bruno Prévost wrote:
>Anybody know how to obtain the table definition in text.
Not quite sure if this is quite what you're after, but would:
$ pg_dump -st foo
help at all? It gives out the SQL that you would need to enter to
re-create the table.
Sam
---(end of bro
Gregory S. Williamson wrote:
>Is there any way to do this from inside postgres that anyone knows of
>? I looked through the manual and the contrib stuff and didn't see
>much ...
Not really "inside postgres"; but could you do something like:
mkfifo db1
psql -h "db1" -t -q -c "$query" > db1
m
Michael L. Hostbaek wrote:
>Now, I need the first line to say "15.00" in the cmup field. That is,
>stock and incoming are obviously not being grouped, but since it's the
>same partno I'd like somehow to show the highest cmup. Is there some
>black SQL voodoo that'll achieve this ?
I think you need