The semicolon in your example is missing.
This code is working on my computer:
do $$
declare d date[] default '{2017-01-01, 2018-01-01}';
begin
raise notice '%', d;
end;
$$;
there are four different syntaxes, but the result and performance will be almost same (maybe there can be very small performance differences that depends on usage):
-- string literal of unknown type with late implicit casting
d := '{2017-01-01, 2018-01-01}';
-- string literal of date[] type
d := _date '{2017-01-01, 2018-01-01}';
There is little bit hack - for date array type I have to use alternative type name _date
. It is old convention - internal names of array types starts by prefix _
.
-- string literal of unknown type with immediate explicit casting
d := '{2017-01-01, 2018-01-01}'::date[];
d := CAST('{2017-01-01, 2018-01-01}' AS date[]);
-- using array constructor with late implicit casting
d := ARRAY['2017-01-01', '2018-01-01'];
-- using array constructor with casting of array
d := ARRAY['2017-01-01', '2018-01-01']::date[];
-- using array constructor with immediate casting of field
d := ARRAY['2017-01-01'::date, '2018-01-01'];
Type of first element forces types of other elements of array
There are more ways how to write array constant - but the differences between mentioned ways are for almost use cases almost zero.