Re: creating view - conditional testing in construct - Mailing list pgsql-novice

From Nathaniel Trellice
Subject Re: creating view - conditional testing in construct
Date
Msg-id 756241.52178.qm@web25005.mail.ukl.yahoo.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to creating view - conditional testing in construct  (richard terry <rterry@pacific.net.au>)
Responses Re: creating view - conditional testing in construct  ("Mohlomi Moloi" <mmoloi@khulisa.com>)
List pgsql-novice
Hi Richard,

The simplest way that I can think of to do it would be to use a conditional expression in the creation of your view.
The'CASE' expression would fit the bill (see section 9.16.1 of the 8.4.1 manual). Slightly altering your conventions
forclarity you might do it like this: 

CREATE vwMyView VIEW AS
  vworganisationsemployees.fk_organisation,
  vworganisationsemployees.fk_branch,
  [a bunch more columns]
-- start of summary
  (vworganisationsemployees.title
   || ' ' || vworganisationsemployees.firstname
   || ' ' || vworganisationsemployees.surname
   [a bunch more concatenated summary fields]
   || (CASE WHEN vworganisationsemployees.fk_address IS NULL
       THEN ''
       ELSE (vworganisationsemployees.fk_street
                  || ' ' || vworganisationsemployees.fk_suburb)
       END)
  )
  AS summary
-- end of summary


There are more elegant ways using stored procedures to do this kind of thing (especially the string concatenation with
acomma and/or a space between the fields--you can add the field delimiter only if the next field is non-NULL/empty and
onlyif you've already had a non-NULLempty entry), but this should get you going. 

Nathaniel


----- Original Message ----
From: richard terry <rterry@pacific.net.au>
To: pgsql-novice@postgresql.org
Sent: Fri, 23 October, 2009 0:21:35
Subject: [NOVICE] creating view - conditional testing in construct

Hi all,

I'm struggling to find the syntax to create a view in this situation.

I'm joining a table to an existing view


create vwMyView as

       vworganisationsemployees.fk_organisation,
        vworganisationsemployees.fk_branch,
        vworganisationsemployees.fk_employee,
        vworganisationsemployees.fk_person,
         vworganisationsemployees.fk_address,
** I want all these fields to end up as as field called, say summary
    (vworganisationsemployees.title ||' '::text) ||
        (vworganisationsemployees.firstname ||' '::text)  ||
        (vworganisationsemployees.surname ||'( '::text)  ||
        (vworganisationsemployees.occupation ||') '::text) ||
        (vworganisationsemployees.organisation ||' '::text) ||
        (vworganisationsemployees.branch ||' '::text)  as summary

so far so good, as all the employees of the organisations will always contain
the data, however in the vwOrganisationsEmployees, some rows will not contain
the address of the branch  ie fk_address is null, and the street and suburb
fields are null.

So at this point in the query it works ok, but I want also to add the address
of the branch into the summary field, and in some records there is no
fk_address and hence no street or suburb.

so I want to be able to conditionally test if fk_address is null, if it is,
then keep adding the street, suburb, postcode to the field which ends up being
called summary.

Any help appreciated.

Regards

Richard

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