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As part of my k-medoid algorithm, I have declared a record variable called o_random in my function, which I use to store a random row retrieved from a table of crimes as in this query:

EXECUTE 'SELECT * FROM algorithms.kmedoid_crimes_' ||k||' WHERE  
cluster_id='||k_count||' OFFSET floor(random()*'||row_count||') LIMIT 1'   
INTO o_random;

However, the below query is giving me an error saying "could not identify column "latitude" in record data type". The crimes table I am getting the row from definitely has a field called latitude.. so I'm thinking I'm trying to get the data from the record variable wrongly?

EXECUTE 'UPDATE algorithms.km_cluster_centres_' ||k||'
SET latitude = $1.latitude, longitude = $1.longitude, geom =   
ST_Transform(ST_SetSRID(ST_MakePoint($1.longitude, $1.latitude), 4326),3435)
WHERE id=' ||k_count
USING o_random;  

Found some solutions on stack but none of them seem to work.. help would be appreciated.

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  • The solution in the related question applies here too, you can use the double-cast "hack" inside the execute statement too, like '... latitude = ($1::text::kmedoid_crimes_'||k||').latitude ...'. Or, if your kmedoid_crimes_* tables have an ancestor, or a type, which all tables follow, you can cast the record to that in the USING clause.
    – pozs
    Mar 21, 2016 at 10:34
  • Hi, you're right it works. Thanks
    – Ponsietta
    Mar 21, 2016 at 10:50

1 Answer 1

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Just a guess

EXECUTE 'UPDATE algorithms.km_cluster_centres_' || quote_literal(k) ||'
  SET latitude = ($1).latitude, longitude = ($1).longitude, geom =   
  ST_Transform(ST_SetSRID(ST_MakePoint(($1).longitude,($1).latitude), 4326),3435)
  WHERE id=' || quote_literal( k_count )
  USING o_random;

UPDATE: If it dosen't work try to log with http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/plpgsql-errors-and-messages.html

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  • nope, same error. It just doesn't seem to find the column names within o_random.. I know that it has data in it though cause I tried outputting it
    – Ponsietta
    Mar 21, 2016 at 9:06

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