Unfortunately Perl is not an option. So given:
EXEC SQL SELECT b INTO :val :val_ind FROM test1;
If I where to reference :val immediately after and if b was NULL what would :val contain, assuming that b is an integer, for example, and that val was not initialised to anything when declared?
Atif
On 27 April 2010 12:52, Francisco Leovey
<fleovey@yahoo.com> wrote:
Yes if done from C - use Perl instead, much better
--- On Tue, 4/27/10, Atif Jung <atifjung@gmail.com> wrote:
From: Atif Jung <atifjung@gmail.com> Subject: [NOVICE] Indicators To: pgsql-novice@postgresql.org Date: Tuesday, April 27, 2010, 8:05 AM Am I correct in understanding that when doing a select on a table I cannot retrieve a NULL value from the database directly into the variable I'm selecting into, but I must use an indicator. So for example EXEC SQL SELECT b INTO :val FROM test1; will fail if b is NULL, so I must use EXEC SQL SELECT b INTO :val :val_ind FROM test1; and then check the value of val_ind. If 0 then val is not NULL is -ve then it is NULL? Thanks Atif
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