I am experiencing unexpected behaviour on Postgres 9.0.4 using pl/pgsql relating to selecting from a function that returns a ROWTYPE into a ROWTYPE variable from within another function. In the example below I:

  1. Create a table, TESTTABLE and insert a row.
  2. Create a function FN_TEST_GET_ROW that returns a row of ROWTYPE TESTTABLE based on selection of a single row from TESTTABLE
  3. Create a test harness in the form of a function TESTX that calls FN_TEST_GET_ROW with ID=1
  4. Call the test harness

The error shown below is returned unexpectedly ERROR: invalid input syntax for integer: "(1,Fred)"

I would just expect the values (1, Fred) to be returned which is what happens if I execute

SELECT fn_test_get_row(1);

directly.

Create table:

CREATE TABLE testtable
(
id INTEGER,
name VARCHAR(10)
);

Add Data:

INSERT INTO testtable (id, name) VALUES (1, 'Fred');

Create function:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION fn_test_get_row(a INTEGER)
RETURNS testtable AS $$
DECLARE
i_row testtable;
BEGIN

SELECT *
INTO   i_row
FROM testtable
WHERE id = a;

-- Success
RETURN i_row;

END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

Create test function:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION testx()
RETURNS testtable AS $$
DECLARE
i_row testtable;
BEGIN

SELECT fn_test_get_row(1)
INTO   i_row;

-- Success
RETURN i_row;
END;    
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

Execute the test function:

select testx();

Error returned:

ERROR:  invalid input syntax for integer: "(1,Fred)"
CONTEXT:  PL/pgSQL function "testx" line 8 at SQL statement

********** Error **********

ERROR: invalid input syntax for integer: "(1,Fred)"
SQL state: 22P02
Context: PL/pgSQL function "testx" line 8 at SQL statement
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Sorry, this got mucked up a bit. Should read: Add Data INSERT INTO testtable (id, name) VALUES (1, 'Fred'); Create function CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION fn_test_get_row(a INTEGER) RETURNS testtable AS $$ DECLARE i_row testtable; BEGIN SELECT * INTO i_row FROM testtable WHERE id = a; RETURN i_row; END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql; Create test function CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION testx() RETURNS testtable AS $$ DECLARE i_row testtable; BEGIN SELECT fn_test_get_row(1) INTO i_row; RETURN i_row; END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql; – Craig Miles Aug 15 '11 at 6:09
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1 Answer

I've not seen the RETURNS tablename syntax before. I'd personally use RETURNS RECORD or RETURNS SETOF. Here are the fixed functions for you. What I did was change the testx function to treat fn_test_get_row() as a table, and change the result type of fn_test_get_row() to a set.

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION fn_test_get_row(a INTEGER)
RETURNS SETOF testtable AS $$
DECLARE
    i_row testtable%ROWTYPE;
BEGIN
    SELECT INTO i_row * FROM testtable WHERE id = a;
    RETURN NEXT i_row;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION testx()
RETURNS SETOF testtable AS $$
DECLARE
    i_row testtable%ROWTYPE;
BEGIN
    SELECT INTO i_row * FROM fn_test_get_row(1) AS foo;
    RETURN NEXT i_row;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

Which gives:

# select testx();
  testx   
---------- 
 (1,Fred)
(1 row)
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