Consider these two PostgreSQL functions:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION f_1 (v1 INTEGER, v2 OUT INTEGER)
AS $$
BEGIN
v2 := v1;
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION f_2 (v1 INTEGER)
RETURNS TABLE(v2 INTEGER)
AS $$
BEGIN
v2 := v1;
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
In any "ordinary" procedural SQL language (e.g. Transact-SQL), the two types of functions would be quite different. f_1
would actually be a procedure, whereas f_2
would be a table-valued function. In SQL Server, the latter is returned from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES
like so:
SELECT r.routine_schema, r.routine_name
FROM information_schema.routines r
WHERE r.routine_type = 'FUNCTION'
AND r.data_type = 'TABLE'
In PostgreSQL, this doesn't work, however. The following query shows that there is essentially no difference between the signatures of f_1
and f_2
:
SELECT r.routine_name, r.data_type, p.parameter_name, p.data_type
FROM information_schema.routines r
JOIN information_schema.parameters p
USING (specific_catalog, specific_schema, specific_name);
The above yields:
routine_name | data_type | parameter_name | data_type
-------------+-----------+----------------+----------
f_1 | integer | v1 | integer
f_1 | integer | v2 | integer
f_2 | integer | v1 | integer
f_2 | integer | v2 | integer
Things don't get much better when I have multiple columns returned from the functions, in case of which I don't even have a "formal" return type anymore. Just record
:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION f_3 (v1 INTEGER, v2 OUT INTEGER, v3 OUT INTEGER)
AS $$
BEGIN
v2 := v1;
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION f_4 (v1 INTEGER)
RETURNS TABLE(v2 INTEGER, v3 INTEGER)
AS $$
BEGIN
v2 := v1;
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
... I'll get:
routine_name | data_type | parameter_name | data_type
-------------+-----------+----------------+----------
f_3 | record | v1 | integer
f_3 | record | v2 | integer
f_3 | record | v3 | integer
f_4 | record | v1 | integer
f_4 | record | v2 | integer
f_4 | record | v3 | integer
If coming from other databases, clearly the intent of the lexical signature is quite different. As an Oracle person, I expect PROCEDURES
to have side-effects, whereas FUNCTIONS
don't have any side-effects (unless in an autonomous transaction) and can be safely embedded in SQL. I know that PostgreSQL cleverly treats all functions as tables, but I don't think it's a good idea to design OUT
parameters as table columns in any query...
My question is:
Is there any formal difference at all between the two ways to declare functions? If there is, how can I discover it from the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
or from the PG_CATALOG
?