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35.5. Expressions

All expressions used in PL/pgSQL statements are processed using the server's regular SQL executor. In effect, a query like

SELECT expression

is executed using the SPI manager. Before evaluation, occurrences of PL/pgSQL variable identifiers are replaced by parameters, and the actual values from the variables are passed to the executor in the parameter array. This allows the query plan for the SELECT to be prepared just once and then reused for subsequent evaluations.

The evaluation done by the PostgreSQL main parser has some side effects on the interpretation of constant values. In detail there is a difference between what these two functions do:

CREATE FUNCTION logfunc1(logtxt text) RETURNS timestamp AS $$ BEGIN INSERT INTO logtable VALUES (logtxt, 'now'); RETURN 'now'; END;$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

and

CREATE FUNCTION logfunc2(logtxt text) RETURNS timestamp AS $$ DECLARE curtime timestamp; BEGIN curtime := 'now'; INSERT INTO logtable VALUES (logtxt, curtime); RETURN curtime; END;$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

In the case of logfunc1, the PostgreSQL main parser knows when preparing the plan for the INSERT, that the string 'now' should be interpreted as timestamp because the target column of logtable is of that type. Thus, it will make a constant from it at this time and this constant value is then used in all invocations of logfunc1 during the lifetime of the session. Needless to say that this isn't what the programmer wanted.

In the case of logfunc2, the PostgreSQL main parser does not know what type 'now' should become and therefore it returns a data value of type text containing the string now. During the ensuing assignment to the local variable curtime, the PL/pgSQL interpreter casts this string to the timestamp type by calling the text_out and timestamp_in functions for the conversion. So, the computed time stamp is updated on each execution as the programmer expects.

The mutable nature of record variables presents a problem in this connection. When fields of a record variable are used in expressions or statements, the data types of the fields must not change between calls of one and the same expression, since the expression will be planned using the data type that is present when the expression is first reached. Keep this in mind when writing trigger procedures that handle events for more than one table. (EXECUTE can be used to get around this problem when necessary.)

 
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