Re: Functions - Mailing list pgsql-novice

From Andrew Hammond
Subject Re: Functions
Date
Msg-id 429DCF56.7060408@ca.afilias.info
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Functions  (Keith Worthington <KeithW@NarrowPathInc.com>)
Responses Re: Functions
List pgsql-novice
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Keith Worthington wrote:
> John DeSoi wrote:
>
>>
>> On May 31, 2005, at 2:52 PM, Nick Jones wrote:
>>
>>> Aww, I was really close :) ... thanks, that works.  I believe I
>>> understand it now :)  Do you normally write functions in plpgsql or a
>>> different language (sql, perl, c)?  I ask so I should know where to
>>> focus my learning.
>>
>>
>> I like plpsql because the semantics are designed for working with
>> databases and PostgreSQL in particular. I would only use a different
>> language for PostgreSQL if plpgsql can't get the job done or cannot do
>> it efficiently.
>>
>> John DeSoi, Ph.D.
>> http://pgedit.com/
>> Power Tools for PostgreSQL
>
>
> While I agree with John and write 98% of my functions in plpsql I found
> it necessary to write a couple of functions in Perl because I had to
> parse a text field that was sufficiently complex as to almost completely
> rule out plpsql.
>
> You will need to focus your learning on whatever makes sense for the
> majority of your application.  The good news is that plpsql comes almost
> for free so you still get one more. ;-)

If I can reasonably write it as an SQL function, then I do it that way (
because it's easiest to read/maintain and might be a little faster).

Otherwise, if I can reasonably write it in plpgsql, then I do it that
way (for the reasons John laid out below and because it's still easy to
read/maintain and harder to shoot myself in the foot with).

Finally, I resort to plpython or plperl when there's "No Other Way".
I've never been in the position where I actually had to write c.

- --
Andrew Hammond    416-673-4138    ahammond@ca.afilias.info
Database Administrator, Afilias Canada Corp.
CB83 2838 4B67 D40F D086 3568 81FC E7E5 27AF 4A9A
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