.pgaw:Help.f.t insert end \ "Synopsis" {bold} " CREATE FUNCTION name ( \[ ftype \[, ...\] \] ) RETURNS rtype AS definition LANGUAGE 'langname' " {code} " name" {italic} " The name of a function to create. " {} "ftype" {italic} " The data type of function arguments. " {} "rtype" {italic} " The return data type. " {} "definition" {italic} " 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. " {} "langname" {italic} " may be 'C', 'sql', 'internal' or 'plname', where 'plname' is the name of a created procedural language. See CREATE LANGUAGE for details. " {} "Outputs" {bold} " CREATE This is returned if the command completes successfully. CREATE FUNCTION allows a Postgres user to register a function with a database. Subsequently, this user is treated as the owner of the function. " {} "Notes:" {italic} "Refer to the chapter on functions in the PostgreSQL Programmer's Guide for further information. Use " {} "DROP FUNCTION" {link drop_function} " to drop 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. 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. For dynamically-loaded C functions, the SQL name of the function must be the same as the C function name, because the AS clause is used to give the path name of the object file containing the C code. In this situation it is best not to try to overload SQL function names. It might work to load a C function that has the same C name as an internal function or another dynamically-loaded function --- or it might not. On some platforms the dynamic loader may botch the load in interesting ways if there is a conflict of C function names. So, even if it works for you today, you might regret overloading names later when you try to run the code somewhere else. " {} "Usage" {bold} " To create a simple SQL function: " {} " CREATE FUNCTION product_price(int4) RETURNS float8 AS 'SELECT price FROM products where id = \$1' LANGUAGE 'sql'; SELECT product_price(314) AS answer; answer ------ 15.25 " {code} " To create a C function, 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)) ); " {code}