346

I'm trying to run the following PHP script to do a simple database query:

$db_host = "localhost";
$db_name = "showfinder";
$username = "user";
$password = "password";
$dbconn = pg_connect("host=$db_host dbname=$db_name user=$username password=$password")
    or die('Could not connect: ' . pg_last_error());

$query = 'SELECT * FROM sf_bands LIMIT 10';
$result = pg_query($query) or die('Query failed: ' . pg_last_error());

This produces the following error:

Query failed: ERROR: relation "sf_bands" does not exist

In all the examples I can find where someone gets an error stating the relation does not exist, it's because they use uppercase letters in their table name. My table name does not have uppercase letters. Is there a way to query my table without including the database name, i.e. showfinder.sf_bands?

6
  • 3
    Are you sure that the sf_bands table exists? Does showfinder.sf_bands work? Mar 29, 2009 at 20:26
  • 1
    showfinder.sf_bands works perfectly
    – Keyslinger
    Mar 29, 2009 at 20:37
  • Perhaps I should note that my database was migrated from MySQL
    – Keyslinger
    Mar 29, 2009 at 20:38
  • 4
    +1 for mentioning that the uppercase letters are the problem. I spent an hour trying to figure out why I could not select from a single table in PostgreSQL. What a terrible program.
    – Brain2000
    Oct 13, 2015 at 3:29
  • 1
    I removed double quotes around the table name and it works
    – mercury
    May 25, 2022 at 18:51

19 Answers 19

495

This error means that you're not referencing the table name correctly. One common reason is that the table is defined with a mixed-case spelling, and you're trying to query it with all lower-case.

In other words, the following fails:

CREATE TABLE "SF_Bands" ( ... );

SELECT * FROM sf_bands;  -- ERROR!

Use double-quotes to delimit identifiers so you can use the specific mixed-case spelling as the table is defined.

SELECT * FROM "SF_Bands";

Re your comment, you can add a schema to the "search_path" so that when you reference a table name without qualifying its schema, the query will match that table name by checked each schema in order. Just like PATH in the shell or include_path in PHP, etc. You can check your current schema search path:

SHOW search_path
  "$user",public

You can change your schema search path:

SET search_path TO showfinder,public;

Read more about the search_path here: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ddl-schemas.html#DDL-SCHEMAS-PATH

13
  • 40
    It appears that even if you type SELECT * FROM SF_Bands this will still fail, because Postgres decides to lowercase that table name for you. Weird... May 17, 2011 at 15:09
  • 6
    @romkyns: Yes, this is actually pretty common across RDBMS brands, that undelimited identifiers are advertised as "case-insensitive." But they're not truly case insensitive because the way they've implemented that is to force lowercase. This matches the name of the table only if you had allowed the table name to be lowercased when you defined the table. If you use double-quote delimiters when you CREATE TABLE, you must use delimiters when you reference it in queries. May 17, 2011 at 15:55
  • 5
    Postgres automatically lowercases table names if they aren't in quotes? That's pretty asinine...
    – Andy
    Jan 4, 2018 at 21:30
  • 4
    @Andy, when you write your own SQL database, feel free to implement case-insensitive identifiers some other way. :) Jan 4, 2018 at 21:39
  • 2
    Before you heap ill-guided invective on PostgreSQL, listen to what the SQL standard has to say: An <SQL language identifier> is equivalent to an <SQL language identifier> in which every letter that is a lower-case letter is replaced by the corresponding upper-case letter or letters. This treatment includes determination of equivalence, representation in the Information and Definition Schemas, representation in diagnostics areas, and similar uses. So while PostgreSQL does not follow the standard in that it folds everything to lower case, case insensitivity as such is required by the standard. Feb 6, 2018 at 12:11
104

I had problems with this and this is the story (sad but true) :

  1. If your table name is all lower case like : accounts you can use: select * from AcCounTs and it will work fine

  2. If your table name is all lower case like : accounts The following will fail: select * from "AcCounTs"

  3. If your table name is mixed case like : Accounts The following will fail: select * from accounts

  4. If your table name is mixed case like : Accounts The following will work OK: select * from "Accounts"

I dont like remembering useless stuff like this but you have to ;)

4
  • 1
    Same for column names in where-clauses
    – Roland
    May 12, 2014 at 15:46
  • 9
    5. Mixed case, like Accounts, will fail with select * from Accounts; I find the weirdest part: same-case is NOT identical.
    – Roland
    May 12, 2014 at 16:00
  • 14
    All there is to it: all names in postgres query are lowercase, unless you use quotes.
    – Erndob
    Oct 3, 2017 at 15:20
  • 1
    The fourth option worked for me, though I'm not using PHP
    – andy
    Mar 1, 2018 at 20:20
34

Postgres process query different from other RDMS. Put schema name in double quote before your table name like this, "SCHEMA_NAME"."SF_Bands"

0
29

Put the dbname parameter in your connection string. It works for me while everything else failed.

Also when doing the select, specify the your_schema.your_table like this:

select * from my_schema.your_table
2
  • 1
    Putting the schema name in, e.g. my_schema.my_relation into the query helped.
    – JoeTidee
    Feb 27, 2015 at 11:57
  • 3
    Thank you very much! It reall helps me solve the problem! But is there a way that i can omit the scheme name?
    – Charlotte
    Nov 26, 2017 at 12:27
24

If a table name contains underscores or upper case, you need to surround it in double-quotes.

SELECT * from "Table_Name";
1
  • Underscores do not create a problem, only uppercase characters do.
    – not2savvy
    Jan 18, 2023 at 14:31
15

I had a similar problem on OSX but tried to play around with double and single quotes. For your case, you could try something like this

$query = 'SELECT * FROM "sf_bands"'; // NOTE: double quotes on "sf_Bands"
0
12

You must write schema name and table name in qutotation mark. As below:

select * from "schemaName"."tableName";
0
11

This is realy helpfull

SET search_path TO schema,public;

I digged this issues more, and found out about how to set this "search_path" by defoult for a new user in current database.

Open DataBase Properties then open Sheet "Variables" and simply add this variable for your user with actual value.

So now your user will get this schema_name by defoult and you could use tableName without schemaName.

0
4

I had the same issue as above and I am using PostgreSQL 10.5. I tried everything as above but nothing seems to be working.

Then I closed the pgadmin and opened a session for the PSQL terminal. Logged into the PSQL and connected to the database and schema respectively :

\c <DATABASE_NAME>;
set search_path to <SCHEMA_NAME>;

Then, restarted the pgadmin console and then I was able to work without issue in the query-tool of the pagadmin.

3

In addition to Bill Karwin's answer =>

Yes, you should surround the table name with double quotes. However, be aware that most probably php will not allow you to just write simply:

$query = "SELECT * FROM "SF_Bands"";

Instead, you should use single quotes while surrounding the query as sav said.

$query = 'SELECT * FROM "SF_Bands"';
2

For me the problem was, that I had used a query to that particular table while Django was initialized. Of course it will then throw an error, because those tables did not exist. In my case, it was a get_or_create method within a admin.py file, that was executed whenever the software ran any kind of operation (in this case the migration). Hope that helps someone.

2

It might be silly for a few, but in my case - once I created the table I could able to query the table on the same session, but if I relogin with new session table does not exits.

Then I used commit just after creating the table and now I could able to find and query the table in the new session as well. Like this:

select * from my_schema.my_tbl;

Hope this would help a few.

1

You have to add the schema first e.g.

SELECT * FROM place.user_place;

If you don't want to add that in all queries then try this:

SET search_path TO place;

Now it will works:

SELECT * FROM user_place;
1

Easiest workaround is Just change the table name and all column names to lowercase and your issue will be resolved.

For example:

  • Change Table_Name to table_name and
  • Change ColumnName to columnname
0

Make sure that Table name doesn't contain any trailing whitespaces

enter image description here

0

Try this: SCHEMA_NAME.TABLE_NAME

1
  • Welcome to SO. Please look at the other answers to this question - you will see, that this way has been suggested by many of them.
    – ahuemmer
    Jul 30, 2022 at 15:44
0

I'd suggest checking if you run the migrations or if the table exists in the database.

1
  • Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Nov 27, 2022 at 23:23
0

I tried every good answer ( upvote > 10) but not works.

I met this problem in pgAdmin4.

so my solution is quite simple:

  1. find the target table / scheme.

  2. mouse right click, and click: query-tool

  3. in this new query tool window, you can run your SQL without specifying set search_path to <SCHEMA_NAME>;

    pgAdmin query tool

  4. you can see the result:

    query editor and data output

0

postgres doesn't like its name casing to be capitalized, you either use an underscore to separate the names or you make all of them lowercase, and the database engine won't be able to locate the name.

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