Return selected columns
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_user_by_username(_username text
, _online bool DEFAULT false)
RETURNS TABLE (
user_id int
, user_name varchar
, last_activity timestamptz
)
LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$func$
BEGIN
IF _online THEN
RETURN QUERY
UPDATE users u
SET last_activity = current_timestamp -- ts with time zone
WHERE u.user_name = _username
RETURNING u.user_id
, u.user_name
, u.last_activity;
ELSE
RETURN QUERY
SELECT u.user_id
, u.user_name
, u.last_activity
FROM users u
WHERE u.user_name = _username;
END IF;
END
$func$;
Call:
SELECT * FROM get_user_by_username('myuser', true);
You had DECLARE result record;
but didn't use the variable. I deleted the cruft.
You can return the record directly from the UPDATE
, which is much faster than calling an additional SELECT
statement. Use RETURN QUERY
and UPDATE
with a RETURNING
clause.
If the user is not _online
, default to a plain SELECT
. This is also the (safe) default if the second parameter is omitted - which is only possible after providing that default with DEFAULT false
in the function definition.
If you don't table-qualify column names (tablename.columnname
) in queries inside the function, be wary of naming conflicts between column names and named parameters, which are visible (most) everywhere inside a function.
You can also avoid such conflicts by using positional references ($n
) for parameters. Or use a prefix that you never use for column names: like an underscore (_username
).
If users.username
is defined unique in your table, then LIMIT 1
in the second query is just cruft. If it is not, then the UPDATE
can update multiple rows, which is most likely wrong. I assume a unique username
and trim the noise.
Define the return type of the function (like @ertx demonstrated) or you have to provide a column definition list with every function call, which is awkward.
Creating a type for that purpose (like @ertx proposed) is a valid approach, but probably overkill for a single function. That was the way to go in old versions of Postgres before we had RETURNS TABLE
for that purpose - like demonstrated above.
You do not need a loop for this simple function.
Every function needs a language declaration. LANGUAGE plpgsql
in this case.
I use timestamptz
(timestamp with time zone
) instead of timestamp
(timestamp without time zone
), which is the sane default. See:
Return (set of) whole row(s)
To return all columns of the existing table users
, there is a simpler way. Postgres automatically defines a composite type of the same name for every table. Just use RETURNS SETOF users
to vastly simplify the query:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_user_by_username(_username text
, _online bool DEFAULT false)
RETURNS SETOF users
LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$func$
BEGIN
IF _online THEN
RETURN QUERY
UPDATE users u
SET last_activity = current_timestamp
WHERE u.user_name = _username
RETURNING u.*;
ELSE
RETURN QUERY
SELECT *
FROM users u
WHERE u.user_name = _username;
END IF;
END
$func$;
Return whole row plus custom addition
To address the question added by TheRealChx101 in a comment below:
What if you also have a calculated value in addition to a whole table? ??
Not as simple, but doable. We can send the whole row type as one field, and add more:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_user_by_username3(_username text
, _online bool DEFAULT false)
RETURNS TABLE (
users_row users
, custom_addition text
)
LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$func$
BEGIN
IF _online THEN
RETURN QUERY
UPDATE users u
SET last_activity = current_timestamp -- ts with time zone
WHERE u.user_name = _username
RETURNING u -- whole row
, u.user_name || u.user_id;
ELSE
RETURN QUERY
SELECT u, u.user_name || u.user_id
FROM users u
WHERE u.user_name = _username;
END IF;
END
$func$;
The "magic" is in the function call, where we (optionally) decompose the row type:
SELECT (users_row).*, custom_addition FROM get_user_by_username('foo', true);
db<>fiddle here (showing all)
If you need something more "dynamic", consider: