CREATE FUNCTION
  
  SQL - Language Statements
 
 
  
   CREATE FUNCTION
  
  
   Defines a new function
  
 
 
  
   2000-03-25
  
  
CREATE FUNCTION name ( [ ftype [, ...] ] )
    RETURNS rtype
    AS definition   
    LANGUAGE 'langname'
    [ WITH ( attribute [, ...] ) ]
CREATE FUNCTION name ( [ ftype [, ...] ] )
    RETURNS rtype
    AS obj_file , link_symbol  
    LANGUAGE 'C'
    [ WITH ( attribute [, ...] ) ]
  
  
  
   
    2000-03-25
   
   
    Inputs
   
   
    
     
      name
      
       
	The name of a function to create.
       
      
     
     
      ftype
      
       
	The data type of function arguments.
	The input types may be base or complex types, or
	opaque.
	opaque indicates that the function
	accepts arguments of an invalid type such as char *.
       
      
     
     
      rtype
      
       
	The return data type.
	The output type may be specified as a base type, complex type, 
	setof type,
	or opaque.
	The setof
	modifier indicates that the function will return a set of items,
	rather than a single item.
       
      
     
     
      attribute
      
       
        An optional piece of information about the function, used for
	optimization.  The only attribute currently supported is
	iscachable.
	iscachable indicates that the function always
	returns the same result when given the same input values (i.e.,
	it does not do database lookups or otherwise use information not
	directly present in its parameter list).  The optimizer uses
	iscachable to know whether it is safe to
	pre-evaluate a call of the function.
       
      
     
     
      definition
      
       
	A string defining the function; the meaning depends on the language.
	It may be an internal function name, the path to an object file,
	an SQL query, or text in a procedural language.
       
      
     
     
      obj_file , link_symbol
      
       
	This form of the AS clause is used for
	dynamically-linked, C language functions when the function name in
	the C language source code is not the same as the name of the SQL
	function. The string obj_file is the name of the file
	containing the dynamically loadable object, and link_symbol, is the object's link
	symbol which is the same as the name of the function in the C
	language source code.
       
      
     
     
      langname
      
       
	may be 'C', 'sql',
	'internal'
	or 'plname',
	where 'plname'
	is the name of a created procedural language. See
	
	for details.
       
      
     
    
   
  
  
   
    2000-03-25
   
   
    Outputs
   
   
    
     
      
CREATE
       
      
       
	This is returned if the command completes successfully.
       
      
     
    
   
  
 
 
  
   2000-03-25
  
  
   Description
  
  
   CREATE FUNCTION allows a
   Postgres user
   to register a function
   with a database. Subsequently, this user is considered the
   owner of the function.
  
  
  
   
    2000-03-25
   
   
    Notes
   
   
    Refer to the chapter in the
    PostgreSQL Programmer's Guide
    on the topic of extending
    Postgres via functions 
    for further information on writing external functions.
   
   
    Use DROP FUNCTION
    to remove user-defined functions.
   
   
    Postgres allows function "overloading";
    that is, the same name can be used for several different functions
    so long as they have distinct argument types.  This facility must
    be used with caution for internal and
    C-language functions, however.    
   
   
    The full SQL92 type syntax is allowed for
    input arguments and return value. However, some details of the
    type specification (e.g. the precision field for
    numeric types) are the responsibility of the
    underlying function implementation and are silently swallowed
    (e.g. not recognized or
    enforced) by the CREATE FUNCTION command.
   
   
    Two internal
    functions cannot have the same C name without causing
    errors at link time.  To get around that, give them different C names
    (for example, use the argument types as part of the C names), then
    specify those names in the AS clause of CREATE FUNCTION.
    If the AS clause is left empty then CREATE FUNCTION
    assumes the C name of the function is the same as the SQL name.
   
   
    When overloading SQL functions with C-language functions, give
    each C-language instance of the function a distinct name, and use
    the alternative form of the AS clause in the
    CREATE FUNCTION syntax to ensure that
    overloaded SQL functions names are resolved to the correct
    dynamically linked objects.
   
   
    A C function cannot return a set of values.
   
  
 
  
 
  
   Usage
  
  
   To create a simple SQL function:
   
CREATE FUNCTION one() RETURNS int4
    AS 'SELECT 1 AS RESULT'
    LANGUAGE 'sql';
SELECT one() AS answer;
    
 answer 
--------
      1
    
   
  
  
   This example creates a C function by calling a routine from a user-created
   shared library.  This particular routine calculates a check
   digit and returns TRUE if the check digit in the function parameters
   is correct. It is intended for use in a CHECK contraint.
  
  
CREATE FUNCTION ean_checkdigit(bpchar, bpchar) RETURNS bool
    AS '/usr1/proj/bray/sql/funcs.so' LANGUAGE 'c';
    
CREATE TABLE product (
    id        char(8) PRIMARY KEY,
    eanprefix char(8) CHECK (eanprefix ~ '[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{5}')
                      REFERENCES brandname(ean_prefix),
    eancode   char(6) CHECK (eancode ~ '[0-9]{6}'),
    CONSTRAINT ean    CHECK (ean_checkdigit(eanprefix, eancode))
);
  
  
   This example creates a function that does type conversion between the
   user defined type complex, and the internal type point.  The
   function is implemented by a dynamically loaded object that was
   compiled from C source. For Postgres to
   find a type conversion function automatically, the sql function has
   to have the same name as the return type, and overloading is
   unavoidable.  The function name is overloaded by using the second
   form of the AS clause in the SQL definition:
  
  
CREATE FUNCTION point(complex) RETURNS point
    AS '/home/bernie/pgsql/lib/complex.so', 'complex_to_point'
    LANGUAGE 'c';
  
  
  The C declaration of the function is:
  
  
Point * complex_to_point (Complex *z)
{
	Point *p;
	p = (Point *) palloc(sizeof(Point));
	p->x = z->x;
	p->y = z->y;
		
	return p;
}
  
    
 
 
 
  
   Compatibility
  
  
   
    2000-03-25
   
   
    SQL92
   
   
    CREATE FUNCTION is
    a Postgres language extension.
   
  
  
   
    2000-03-25
   
   
    SQL/PSM
   
   
    
     
      PSM stands for Persistent Stored Modules. It is a procedural
      language and it was originally hoped that PSM would be ratified
      as an official standard by late 1996. As of mid-1998, this
      has not yet happened, but it is hoped that PSM will
      eventually become a standard.
     
    
    SQL/PSM CREATE FUNCTION has the following syntax:
    
CREATE FUNCTION name
    ( [ [ IN | OUT | INOUT ] type [, ...] ] )
     RETURNS rtype
     LANGUAGE 'langname'
     ESPECIFIC routine
     SQL-statement