On Tue, Jan 18, 2005 at 05:04:58PM +0100, KÖPFERL Robert wrote:
> I'm currently writing a function which encapsulates a delete and should
> return a bool as indicator for success.
How do you define success? When the delete affects one or more rows?
> DELETE FROM "TariffDetails" WHERE "TariffId"=$1 and "BNumberPrefix"=$2;
> SELECT TRUE;
>
> but this makes me not happy.
> How can I distingruish wehter DELETE affected 0 or more rows and return that
> while DELETE is not capable of returning any value?
If you're using PL/pgSQL then see "Obtaining the Result Status" in
the "Basic Statements" section of the PL/pgSQL documentation.
> And is the whole function executed if the DELETE fails or will it stop
> bevore the select?
A PL/pgSQL function should exit immediately with an error if the
DELETE fails. But understand that PL/pgSQL's notion of a failure
might not match yours: trying to delete from a non-existent table
is a failure, but deleting zero rows from an existing table isn't.
--
Michael Fuhr
http://www.fuhr.org/~mfuhr/