vote up 1 vote down star

Is there a concise way to select the nextval for a PostgreSQL sequence multiple times in 1 query? This would be the only value being returned.

For example, I would like to do something really short and sweet like:

SELECT NEXTVAL('mytable_seq', 3) AS id;

And get:

 id  
-----
 118
 119
 120
(3 rows)
flag

75% accept rate

5 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check
select nextval('mytable_seq') from generate_series(1,3);

generate_series is a function which returns many rows with sequential numbers, configured by it's arguments.

In above example, we don't care about the value in each row, we just use generate_series as row generator. And for each row we can call nextval.

You can wrap this into function, but I'm not sure if it's really sensible given how short the query is.

link|flag
EXACTLY what I was looking for, thanks! – Mike Stone May 22 at 5:21
vote up 0 vote down

My current best solution is:

SELECT NEXTVAL('mytable_seq') AS id
UNION ALL
SELECT NEXTVAL('mytable_seq') AS id
UNION ALL
SELECT NEXTVAL('mytable_seq') AS id;

Which will correctly return 3 rows... but I would like something that is minimal SQL for even as much as 100 or more NEXTVAL invocations.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION foo() RETURNS SETOF INT AS $$
DECLARE
    seqval int; x int;
BEGIN
x := 0;

WHILE x < 100 LOOP
    SELECT into seqval nextval('f_id_seq');
    RETURN NEXT seqval;
    x := x+1;
END LOOP;
RETURN;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql STRICT;

Of course, if all you're trying to do is advance the sequence, there's setval().

You could also have the function take a parameter for how many times to loop:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION foo(loopcnt int) RETURNS SETOF INT AS $$
DECLARE
    seqval int;       
    x int;
BEGIN
x := 0;
WHILE x < loopcnt LOOP
    SELECT into seqval nextval('f_id_seq');
    RETURN NEXT seqval;x := x+1;
END LOOP;
RETURN;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql STRICT;
link|flag
Note that due to the use of 'setof', you have to call this as a table: select * from foo(500); – TML May 22 at 4:22
vote up 0 vote down

Unless you really want three rows returned I would set the sequence to 'INCREMENT BY 3' for each select. Then you can simple add 1 and 2 to the result have have your three sequence numbers.

I tried to add a link to the postgresql docs, but apparenty I am not allowed to post links.

link|flag
Appreciated, but the downfalls pointed out in the link from Ants Aasma are too steep for me to alter the increment... and the number of ids I need varies, so I prefer obtaining all the ids individually (which makes the code that uses the ids simpler anyways). – Mike Stone May 28 at 2:29
vote up 1 vote down

There is a great article about this exact problem: "getting multiple values from sequences".

If performance is not an issue, for instance when using the sequence values dwarfs the time used to get them or n is small, then the *SELECT nextval('seq') FROM generate_series(1,n)* approach is the simplest and most appropriate.

But when preparing data for bulk loads the last approach from the article of incrementing the sequence by n from within a lock is appropriate.

link|flag
Interestingly, that article appears to be written by the person who wrote the answer I accepted :-) Regardless, the generate_series fits my need because the number of ids I need is around a dozen. On a very rare case, maybe 100... so the downfalls of the other solution presented in the article are too steep for my uses. +1 for nice link though! – Mike Stone May 28 at 2:26

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.