How do I declare a variable for use in a PostgreSQL 8.3 query?
In MS SQL Server I can do this:
DECLARE @myvar INT SET @myvar = 5 SELECT * FROM somewhere WHERE something = @myvar How do I do the same in PostgreSQL? According to the documentation variables are declared simply as "name type;", but this gives me a syntax error:
myvar INTEGER; Could someone give me an example of the correct syntax?
214 Answers
I accomplished the same goal by using a WITH clause, it's nowhere near as elegant but can do the same thing. Though for this example it's really overkill. I also don't particularly recommend this.
WITH myconstants (var1, var2) as ( values (5, 'foo') ) SELECT * FROM somewhere, myconstants WHERE something = var1 OR something_else = var2; 8There is no such feature in PostgreSQL. You can do it only in pl/PgSQL (or other pl/*), but not in plain SQL.
An exception is WITH () query which can work as a variable, or even tuple of variables. It allows you to return a table of temporary values.
WITH master_user AS ( SELECT login, registration_date FROM users WHERE ... ) SELECT * FROM users WHERE master_login = (SELECT login FROM master_user) AND (SELECT registration_date FROM master_user) > ...; 1You could also try this in PLPGSQL:
DO $$ DECLARE myvar integer; BEGIN SELECT 5 INTO myvar; DROP TABLE IF EXISTS tmp_table; CREATE TABLE tmp_table AS SELECT * FROM yourtable WHERE id = myvar; END $$; SELECT * FROM tmp_table; The above requires Postgres 9.0 or later.
2Dynamic Config Settings
you can "abuse" dynamic config settings for this:
-- choose some prefix that is unlikely to be used by postgres set session my.vars.id = '1'; select * from person where id = current_setting('my.vars.id')::int; Config settings are always varchar values, so you need to cast them to the correct data type when using them. This works with any SQL client whereas \set only works in psql
The above requires Postgres 9.2 or later.
For previous versions, the variable had to be declared in postgresql.conf prior to being used, so it limited its usability somewhat. Actually not the variable completely, but the config "class" which is essentially the prefix. But once the prefix was defined, any variable could be used without changing postgresql.conf
It depends on your client.
However, if you're using the psql client, then you can use the following:
my_db=> \set myvar 5 my_db=> SELECT :myvar + 1 AS my_var_plus_1; my_var_plus_1 --------------- 6 If you are using text variables you need to quote.
\set myvar 'sometextvalue' select * from sometable where name = :'myvar'; 3This solution is based on the one proposed by fei0x but it has the advantages that there is no need to join the value list of constants in the query and constants can be easily listed at the start of the query. It also works in recursive queries.
Basically, every constant is a single-value table declared in a WITH clause which can then be called anywhere in the remaining part of the query.
- Basic example with two constants:
WITH constant_1_str AS (VALUES ('Hello World')), constant_2_int AS (VALUES (100)) SELECT * FROM some_table WHERE table_column = (table constant_1_str) LIMIT (table constant_2_int) Alternatively you can use SELECT * FROM constant_name instead of TABLE constant_name which might not be valid for other query languages different to postgresql.
Using a Temp Table outside of pl/PgSQL
Outside of using pl/pgsql or other pl/* language as suggested, this is the only other possibility I could think of.
begin; select 5::int as var into temp table myvar; select * from somewhere s, myvar v where s.something = v.var; commit; I want to propose an improvement to @DarioBarrionuevo's answer, to make it simpler leveraging temporary tables.
DO $$ DECLARE myvar integer = 5; BEGIN CREATE TEMP TABLE tmp_table ON COMMIT DROP AS -- put here your query with variables: SELECT * FROM yourtable WHERE id = myvar; END $$; SELECT * FROM tmp_table; 2True, there is no vivid and unambiguous way to declare a single-value variable, what you can do is
with myVar as (select "any value really") then, to get access to the value stored in this construction, you do
(select * from myVar) for example
with var as (select 123) ... where id = (select * from var) 1You may resort to tool special features. Like for DBeaver own proprietary syntax:
@set name = 'me' SELECT :name; SELECT ${name}; DELETE FROM book b WHERE b.author_id IN (SELECT a.id FROM author AS a WHERE a.name = :name); 1Here is an example using PREPARE statements. You still can't use ?, but you can use $n notation:
PREPARE foo(integer) AS SELECT * FROM somewhere WHERE something = $1; EXECUTE foo(5); DEALLOCATE foo; 0In DBeaver you can use parameters in queries just like you can from code, so this will work:
SELECT * FROM somewhere WHERE something = :myvar When you run the query DBeaver will ask you for the value for :myvar and run the query.
Here is a code segment using plain variable in postges terminal. I have used it a few times. But need to figure a better way. Here I am working with string variable. Working with integer variable, you don't need the triple quote. Triple quote becomes single quote at query time; otherwise you got syntax error. There might be a way to eliminate the need of triple quote when working with string variables. Please update if you find a way to improve.
\set strainname '''B.1.1.7''' select * from covid19strain where name = :strainname ; 0As you will have gathered from the other answers, PostgreSQL doesn’t have this mechanism in straight SQL, though you can now use an anonymous block. However, you can do something similar with a Common Table Expression (CTE):
WITH vars AS ( SELECT 5 AS myvar ) SELECT * FROM somewhere,vars WHERE something = vars.myvar; You can, of cause have as many variables as you like, and they can also be derived. For example:
WITH vars AS ( SELECT '1980-01-01'::date AS start, '1999-12-31'::date AS end, (SELECT avg(height) FROM customers) AS avg_height ) SELECT * FROM customers,vars WHERE (dob BETWEEN vars.start AND vars.end) AND height<vars.avg_height; The process is:
- Generate a one-row cte using
SELECTwithout a table (in Oracle you will need to inclludeFROM DUAL). - CROSS JOIN the cte with the other table. Although there is a
CROSS JOINsyntax, the older comma syntax is slightly more readable. - Note that I have cast the dates to avoid possible issues in the
SELECTclause. I used PostgreSQL’s shorter syntax, but you could have used the more formalCAST('1980-01-01' AS date)for cross-dialect compatibility.
Normally, you want to avoid cross joins, but since you’re only cross joining a single row, this has the effect of simply widening the table with the variable data.
In many cases, you don’t need to include the vars. prefix if the names don’t clash with the names in the other table. I include it here to make the point clear.
Also, you can go on to add more CTEs.
This also works in all current versions of MSSQL and MySQL, which do support variables, as well as SQLite which doesn’t, and Oracle which sort of does and sort of doesn’t.
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