I want to use SELECT INTO
to make a temporary table in one of my functions. SELECT INTO
works in SQL but not PL/pgSQL.
This statement creates a table called mytable (If orig_table
exists as a relation):
SELECT *
INTO TEMP TABLE mytable
FROM orig_table;
But put this function into PostgreSQL, and you get the error: ERROR: "temp" is not a known variable
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION whatever()
RETURNS void AS $$
BEGIN
SELECT *
INTO TEMP TABLE mytable
FROM orig_table;
END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
I can SELECT INTO
a variable of type record
within PL/pgSQL, but then I have to define the structure when getting data out of that record. SELECT INTO
is really simple - automatically creating a table of the same structure of the SELECT
query. Does anyone have any explanation for why this doesn't work inside a function?
It seems like SELECT INTO
works differently in PL/pgSQL, because you can select into the variables you've declared. I don't want to declare my temporary table structure, though. I wish it would just create the structure automatically like it does in SQL.
Try
CREATE TEMP TABLE mytable AS
SELECT *
FROM orig_table;
Per http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-selectinto.html
CREATE TABLE AS is functionally similar to SELECT INTO. CREATE TABLE AS is the recommended syntax, since this form of SELECT INTO is not available in ECPG or PL/pgSQL, because they interpret the INTO clause differently. Furthermore, CREATE TABLE AS offers a superset of the functionality provided by SELECT INTO.