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+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"><html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /><title>F.40. tablefunc</title><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheet.css" /><link rev="made" href="pgsql-docs@lists.postgresql.org" /><meta name="generator" content="DocBook XSL Stylesheets Vsnapshot" /><link rel="prev" href="sslinfo.html" title="F.39. sslinfo" /><link rel="next" href="tcn.html" title="F.41. tcn" /></head><body id="docContent" class="container-fluid col-10"><div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/transitional" class="navheader"><table width="100%" summary="Navigation header"><tr><th colspan="5" align="center">F.40. tablefunc</th></tr><tr><td width="10%" align="left"><a accesskey="p" href="sslinfo.html" title="F.39. sslinfo">Prev</a> </td><td width="10%" align="left"><a accesskey="u" href="contrib.html" title="Appendix F. Additional Supplied Modules">Up</a></td><th width="60%" align="center">Appendix F. Additional Supplied Modules</th><td width="10%" align="right"><a accesskey="h" href="index.html" title="PostgreSQL 14.5 Documentation">Home</a></td><td width="10%" align="right"> <a accesskey="n" href="tcn.html" title="F.41. tcn">Next</a></td></tr></table><hr></hr></div><div class="sect1" id="TABLEFUNC"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">F.40. tablefunc</h2></div></div></div><div class="toc"><dl class="toc"><dt><span class="sect2"><a href="tablefunc.html#id-1.11.7.49.5">F.40.1. Functions Provided</a></span></dt><dt><span class="sect2"><a href="tablefunc.html#id-1.11.7.49.6">F.40.2. Author</a></span></dt></dl></div><a id="id-1.11.7.49.2" class="indexterm"></a><p>
+ The <code class="filename">tablefunc</code> module includes various functions that return
+ tables (that is, multiple rows). These functions are useful both in their
+ own right and as examples of how to write C functions that return
+ multiple rows.
+ </p><p>
+ This module is considered <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">trusted</span>”</span>, that is, it can be
+ installed by non-superusers who have <code class="literal">CREATE</code> privilege
+ on the current database.
+ </p><div class="sect2" id="id-1.11.7.49.5"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title">F.40.1. Functions Provided</h3></div></div></div><p>
+ <a class="xref" href="tablefunc.html#TABLEFUNC-FUNCTIONS" title="Table F.31. tablefunc Functions">Table F.31</a> summarizes the functions provided
+ by the <code class="filename">tablefunc</code> module.
+ </p><div class="table" id="TABLEFUNC-FUNCTIONS"><p class="title"><strong>Table F.31. <code class="filename">tablefunc</code> Functions</strong></p><div class="table-contents"><table class="table" summary="tablefunc Functions" border="1"><colgroup><col /></colgroup><thead><tr><th class="func_table_entry"><p class="func_signature">
+ Function
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Description
+ </p></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td class="func_table_entry"><p class="func_signature">
+ <code class="function">normal_rand</code> ( <em class="parameter"><code>numvals</code></em> <code class="type">integer</code>, <em class="parameter"><code>mean</code></em> <code class="type">float8</code>, <em class="parameter"><code>stddev</code></em> <code class="type">float8</code> )
+ → <code class="returnvalue">setof float8</code>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Produces a set of normally distributed random values.
+ </p></td></tr><tr><td class="func_table_entry"><p class="func_signature">
+ <code class="function">crosstab</code> ( <em class="parameter"><code>sql</code></em> <code class="type">text</code> )
+ → <code class="returnvalue">setof record</code>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Produces a <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">pivot table</span>”</span> containing
+ row names plus <em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em> value columns, where
+ <em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em> is determined by the row type specified
+ in the calling query.
+ </p></td></tr><tr><td class="func_table_entry"><p class="func_signature">
+ <code class="function">crosstab<em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em></code> ( <em class="parameter"><code>sql</code></em> <code class="type">text</code> )
+ → <code class="returnvalue">setof table_crosstab_<em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em></code>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Produces a <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">pivot table</span>”</span> containing
+ row names plus <em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em> value columns.
+ <code class="function">crosstab2</code>, <code class="function">crosstab3</code>, and
+ <code class="function">crosstab4</code> are predefined, but you can create additional
+ <code class="function">crosstab<em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em></code> functions as described below.
+ </p></td></tr><tr><td class="func_table_entry"><p class="func_signature">
+ <code class="function">crosstab</code> ( <em class="parameter"><code>source_sql</code></em> <code class="type">text</code>, <em class="parameter"><code>category_sql</code></em> <code class="type">text</code> )
+ → <code class="returnvalue">setof record</code>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Produces a <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">pivot table</span>”</span>
+ with the value columns specified by a second query.
+ </p></td></tr><tr><td class="func_table_entry"><p class="func_signature">
+ <code class="function">crosstab</code> ( <em class="parameter"><code>sql</code></em> <code class="type">text</code>, <em class="parameter"><code>N</code></em> <code class="type">integer</code> )
+ → <code class="returnvalue">setof record</code>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Obsolete version of <code class="function">crosstab(text)</code>.
+ The parameter <em class="parameter"><code>N</code></em> is now ignored, since the
+ number of value columns is always determined by the calling query.
+ </p></td></tr><tr><td class="func_table_entry"><p class="func_signature">
+ <a id="id-1.11.7.49.5.3.2.2.6.1.1.1" class="indexterm"></a>
+ <code class="function">connectby</code> ( <em class="parameter"><code>relname</code></em> <code class="type">text</code>, <em class="parameter"><code>keyid_fld</code></em> <code class="type">text</code>, <em class="parameter"><code>parent_keyid_fld</code></em> <code class="type">text</code>
+ [<span class="optional">, <em class="parameter"><code>orderby_fld</code></em> <code class="type">text</code> </span>], <em class="parameter"><code>start_with</code></em> <code class="type">text</code>, <em class="parameter"><code>max_depth</code></em> <code class="type">integer</code>
+ [<span class="optional">, <em class="parameter"><code>branch_delim</code></em> <code class="type">text</code> </span>] )
+ → <code class="returnvalue">setof record</code>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Produces a representation of a hierarchical tree structure.
+ </p></td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><br class="table-break" /><div class="sect3" id="id-1.11.7.49.5.4"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title">F.40.1.1. <code class="function">normal_rand</code></h4></div></div></div><a id="id-1.11.7.49.5.4.2" class="indexterm"></a><pre class="synopsis">
+normal_rand(int numvals, float8 mean, float8 stddev) returns setof float8
+</pre><p>
+ <code class="function">normal_rand</code> produces a set of normally distributed random
+ values (Gaussian distribution).
+ </p><p>
+ <em class="parameter"><code>numvals</code></em> is the number of values to be returned
+ from the function. <em class="parameter"><code>mean</code></em> is the mean of the normal
+ distribution of values and <em class="parameter"><code>stddev</code></em> is the standard
+ deviation of the normal distribution of values.
+ </p><p>
+ For example, this call requests 1000 values with a mean of 5 and a
+ standard deviation of 3:
+ </p><pre class="screen">
+test=# SELECT * FROM normal_rand(1000, 5, 3);
+ normal_rand
+----------------------
+ 1.56556322244898
+ 9.10040991424657
+ 5.36957140345079
+ -0.369151492880995
+ 0.283600703686639
+ .
+ .
+ .
+ 4.82992125404908
+ 9.71308014517282
+ 2.49639286969028
+(1000 rows)
+</pre></div><div class="sect3" id="id-1.11.7.49.5.5"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title">F.40.1.2. <code class="function">crosstab(text)</code></h4></div></div></div><a id="id-1.11.7.49.5.5.2" class="indexterm"></a><pre class="synopsis">
+crosstab(text sql)
+crosstab(text sql, int N)
+</pre><p>
+ The <code class="function">crosstab</code> function is used to produce <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">pivot</span>”</span>
+ displays, wherein data is listed across the page rather than down.
+ For example, we might have data like
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+row1 val11
+row1 val12
+row1 val13
+...
+row2 val21
+row2 val22
+row2 val23
+...
+</pre><p>
+ which we wish to display like
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+row1 val11 val12 val13 ...
+row2 val21 val22 val23 ...
+...
+</pre><p>
+ The <code class="function">crosstab</code> function takes a text parameter that is an SQL
+ query producing raw data formatted in the first way, and produces a table
+ formatted in the second way.
+ </p><p>
+ The <em class="parameter"><code>sql</code></em> parameter is an SQL statement that produces
+ the source set of data. This statement must return one
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> column, one
+ <code class="structfield">category</code> column, and one
+ <code class="structfield">value</code> column. <em class="parameter"><code>N</code></em> is an
+ obsolete parameter, ignored if supplied (formerly this had to match the
+ number of output value columns, but now that is determined by the
+ calling query).
+ </p><p>
+ For example, the provided query might produce a set something like:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+ row_name cat value
+----------+-------+-------
+ row1 cat1 val1
+ row1 cat2 val2
+ row1 cat3 val3
+ row1 cat4 val4
+ row2 cat1 val5
+ row2 cat2 val6
+ row2 cat3 val7
+ row2 cat4 val8
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ The <code class="function">crosstab</code> function is declared to return <code class="type">setof
+ record</code>, so the actual names and types of the output columns must be
+ defined in the <code class="literal">FROM</code> clause of the calling <code class="command">SELECT</code>
+ statement, for example:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+SELECT * FROM crosstab('...') AS ct(row_name text, category_1 text, category_2 text);
+</pre><p>
+ This example produces a set something like:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+ &lt;== value columns ==&gt;
+ row_name category_1 category_2
+----------+------------+------------
+ row1 val1 val2
+ row2 val5 val6
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ The <code class="literal">FROM</code> clause must define the output as one
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> column (of the same data type as the first result
+ column of the SQL query) followed by N <code class="structfield">value</code> columns
+ (all of the same data type as the third result column of the SQL query).
+ You can set up as many output value columns as you wish. The names of the
+ output columns are up to you.
+ </p><p>
+ The <code class="function">crosstab</code> function produces one output row for each
+ consecutive group of input rows with the same
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> value. It fills the output
+ <code class="structfield">value</code> columns, left to right, with the
+ <code class="structfield">value</code> fields from these rows. If there
+ are fewer rows in a group than there are output <code class="structfield">value</code>
+ columns, the extra output columns are filled with nulls; if there are
+ more rows, the extra input rows are skipped.
+ </p><p>
+ In practice the SQL query should always specify <code class="literal">ORDER BY 1,2</code>
+ to ensure that the input rows are properly ordered, that is, values with
+ the same <code class="structfield">row_name</code> are brought together and
+ correctly ordered within the row. Notice that <code class="function">crosstab</code>
+ itself does not pay any attention to the second column of the query
+ result; it's just there to be ordered by, to control the order in which
+ the third-column values appear across the page.
+ </p><p>
+ Here is a complete example:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+CREATE TABLE ct(id SERIAL, rowid TEXT, attribute TEXT, value TEXT);
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test1','att1','val1');
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test1','att2','val2');
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test1','att3','val3');
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test1','att4','val4');
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test2','att1','val5');
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test2','att2','val6');
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test2','att3','val7');
+INSERT INTO ct(rowid, attribute, value) VALUES('test2','att4','val8');
+
+SELECT *
+FROM crosstab(
+ 'select rowid, attribute, value
+ from ct
+ where attribute = ''att2'' or attribute = ''att3''
+ order by 1,2')
+AS ct(row_name text, category_1 text, category_2 text, category_3 text);
+
+ row_name | category_1 | category_2 | category_3
+----------+------------+------------+------------
+ test1 | val2 | val3 |
+ test2 | val6 | val7 |
+(2 rows)
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ You can avoid always having to write out a <code class="literal">FROM</code> clause to
+ define the output columns, by setting up a custom crosstab function that
+ has the desired output row type wired into its definition. This is
+ described in the next section. Another possibility is to embed the
+ required <code class="literal">FROM</code> clause in a view definition.
+ </p><div class="note"><h3 class="title">Note</h3><p>
+ See also the <code class="command"><a class="link" href="app-psql.html#APP-PSQL-META-COMMANDS-CROSSTABVIEW">\crosstabview</a></code>
+ command in <span class="application">psql</span>, which provides functionality similar
+ to <code class="function">crosstab()</code>.
+ </p></div></div><div class="sect3" id="id-1.11.7.49.5.6"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title">F.40.1.3. <code class="function">crosstab<em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em>(text)</code></h4></div></div></div><a id="id-1.11.7.49.5.6.2" class="indexterm"></a><pre class="synopsis">
+crosstab<em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em>(text sql)
+</pre><p>
+ The <code class="function">crosstab<em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em></code> functions are examples of how
+ to set up custom wrappers for the general <code class="function">crosstab</code> function,
+ so that you need not write out column names and types in the calling
+ <code class="command">SELECT</code> query. The <code class="filename">tablefunc</code> module includes
+ <code class="function">crosstab2</code>, <code class="function">crosstab3</code>, and
+ <code class="function">crosstab4</code>, whose output row types are defined as
+ </p><pre class="programlisting">
+CREATE TYPE tablefunc_crosstab_N AS (
+ row_name TEXT,
+ category_1 TEXT,
+ category_2 TEXT,
+ .
+ .
+ .
+ category_N TEXT
+);
+</pre><p>
+ Thus, these functions can be used directly when the input query produces
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> and <code class="structfield">value</code> columns of type
+ <code class="type">text</code>, and you want 2, 3, or 4 output values columns.
+ In all other ways they behave exactly as described above for the
+ general <code class="function">crosstab</code> function.
+ </p><p>
+ For instance, the example given in the previous section would also
+ work as
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+SELECT *
+FROM crosstab3(
+ 'select rowid, attribute, value
+ from ct
+ where attribute = ''att2'' or attribute = ''att3''
+ order by 1,2');
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ These functions are provided mostly for illustration purposes. You
+ can create your own return types and functions based on the
+ underlying <code class="function">crosstab()</code> function. There are two ways
+ to do it:
+
+ </p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" style="list-style-type: disc; "><li class="listitem"><p>
+ Create a composite type describing the desired output columns,
+ similar to the examples in
+ <code class="filename">contrib/tablefunc/tablefunc--1.0.sql</code>.
+ Then define a
+ unique function name accepting one <code class="type">text</code> parameter and returning
+ <code class="type">setof your_type_name</code>, but linking to the same underlying
+ <code class="function">crosstab</code> C function. For example, if your source data
+ produces row names that are <code class="type">text</code>, and values that are
+ <code class="type">float8</code>, and you want 5 value columns:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+CREATE TYPE my_crosstab_float8_5_cols AS (
+ my_row_name text,
+ my_category_1 float8,
+ my_category_2 float8,
+ my_category_3 float8,
+ my_category_4 float8,
+ my_category_5 float8
+);
+
+CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION crosstab_float8_5_cols(text)
+ RETURNS setof my_crosstab_float8_5_cols
+ AS '$libdir/tablefunc','crosstab' LANGUAGE C STABLE STRICT;
+</pre><p>
+ </p></li><li class="listitem"><p>
+ Use <code class="literal">OUT</code> parameters to define the return type implicitly.
+ The same example could also be done this way:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION crosstab_float8_5_cols(
+ IN text,
+ OUT my_row_name text,
+ OUT my_category_1 float8,
+ OUT my_category_2 float8,
+ OUT my_category_3 float8,
+ OUT my_category_4 float8,
+ OUT my_category_5 float8)
+ RETURNS setof record
+ AS '$libdir/tablefunc','crosstab' LANGUAGE C STABLE STRICT;
+</pre><p>
+ </p></li></ul></div><p>
+ </p></div><div class="sect3" id="id-1.11.7.49.5.7"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title">F.40.1.4. <code class="function">crosstab(text, text)</code></h4></div></div></div><a id="id-1.11.7.49.5.7.2" class="indexterm"></a><pre class="synopsis">
+crosstab(text source_sql, text category_sql)
+</pre><p>
+ The main limitation of the single-parameter form of <code class="function">crosstab</code>
+ is that it treats all values in a group alike, inserting each value into
+ the first available column. If you want the value
+ columns to correspond to specific categories of data, and some groups
+ might not have data for some of the categories, that doesn't work well.
+ The two-parameter form of <code class="function">crosstab</code> handles this case by
+ providing an explicit list of the categories corresponding to the
+ output columns.
+ </p><p>
+ <em class="parameter"><code>source_sql</code></em> is an SQL statement that produces the
+ source set of data. This statement must return one
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> column, one
+ <code class="structfield">category</code> column, and one
+ <code class="structfield">value</code> column. It may also have one or more
+ <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">extra</span>”</span> columns.
+ The <code class="structfield">row_name</code> column must be first. The
+ <code class="structfield">category</code> and <code class="structfield">value</code>
+ columns must be the last two columns, in that order. Any columns between
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> and
+ <code class="structfield">category</code> are treated as <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">extra</span>”</span>.
+ The <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">extra</span>”</span> columns are expected to be the same for all rows
+ with the same <code class="structfield">row_name</code> value.
+ </p><p>
+ For example, <em class="parameter"><code>source_sql</code></em> might produce a set
+ something like:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+SELECT row_name, extra_col, cat, value FROM foo ORDER BY 1;
+
+ row_name extra_col cat value
+----------+------------+-----+---------
+ row1 extra1 cat1 val1
+ row1 extra1 cat2 val2
+ row1 extra1 cat4 val4
+ row2 extra2 cat1 val5
+ row2 extra2 cat2 val6
+ row2 extra2 cat3 val7
+ row2 extra2 cat4 val8
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ <em class="parameter"><code>category_sql</code></em> is an SQL statement that produces
+ the set of categories. This statement must return only one column.
+ It must produce at least one row, or an error will be generated.
+ Also, it must not produce duplicate values, or an error will be
+ generated. <em class="parameter"><code>category_sql</code></em> might be something like:
+
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+SELECT DISTINCT cat FROM foo ORDER BY 1;
+ cat
+ -------
+ cat1
+ cat2
+ cat3
+ cat4
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ The <code class="function">crosstab</code> function is declared to return <code class="type">setof
+ record</code>, so the actual names and types of the output columns must be
+ defined in the <code class="literal">FROM</code> clause of the calling <code class="command">SELECT</code>
+ statement, for example:
+
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+SELECT * FROM crosstab('...', '...')
+ AS ct(row_name text, extra text, cat1 text, cat2 text, cat3 text, cat4 text);
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ This will produce a result something like:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+ &lt;== value columns ==&gt;
+row_name extra cat1 cat2 cat3 cat4
+---------+-------+------+------+------+------
+ row1 extra1 val1 val2 val4
+ row2 extra2 val5 val6 val7 val8
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ The <code class="literal">FROM</code> clause must define the proper number of output
+ columns of the proper data types. If there are <em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em>
+ columns in the <em class="parameter"><code>source_sql</code></em> query's result, the first
+ <em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em>-2 of them must match up with the first
+ <em class="replaceable"><code>N</code></em>-2 output columns. The remaining output columns
+ must have the type of the last column of the <em class="parameter"><code>source_sql</code></em>
+ query's result, and there must be exactly as many of them as there
+ are rows in the <em class="parameter"><code>category_sql</code></em> query's result.
+ </p><p>
+ The <code class="function">crosstab</code> function produces one output row for each
+ consecutive group of input rows with the same
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> value. The output
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> column, plus any <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">extra</span>”</span>
+ columns, are copied from the first row of the group. The output
+ <code class="structfield">value</code> columns are filled with the
+ <code class="structfield">value</code> fields from rows having matching
+ <code class="structfield">category</code> values. If a row's <code class="structfield">category</code>
+ does not match any output of the <em class="parameter"><code>category_sql</code></em>
+ query, its <code class="structfield">value</code> is ignored. Output
+ columns whose matching category is not present in any input row
+ of the group are filled with nulls.
+ </p><p>
+ In practice the <em class="parameter"><code>source_sql</code></em> query should always
+ specify <code class="literal">ORDER BY 1</code> to ensure that values with the same
+ <code class="structfield">row_name</code> are brought together. However,
+ ordering of the categories within a group is not important.
+ Also, it is essential to be sure that the order of the
+ <em class="parameter"><code>category_sql</code></em> query's output matches the specified
+ output column order.
+ </p><p>
+ Here are two complete examples:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+create table sales(year int, month int, qty int);
+insert into sales values(2007, 1, 1000);
+insert into sales values(2007, 2, 1500);
+insert into sales values(2007, 7, 500);
+insert into sales values(2007, 11, 1500);
+insert into sales values(2007, 12, 2000);
+insert into sales values(2008, 1, 1000);
+
+select * from crosstab(
+ 'select year, month, qty from sales order by 1',
+ 'select m from generate_series(1,12) m'
+) as (
+ year int,
+ "Jan" int,
+ "Feb" int,
+ "Mar" int,
+ "Apr" int,
+ "May" int,
+ "Jun" int,
+ "Jul" int,
+ "Aug" int,
+ "Sep" int,
+ "Oct" int,
+ "Nov" int,
+ "Dec" int
+);
+ year | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec
+------+------+------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+------+------
+ 2007 | 1000 | 1500 | | | | | 500 | | | | 1500 | 2000
+ 2008 | 1000 | | | | | | | | | | |
+(2 rows)
+</pre><p>
+
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+CREATE TABLE cth(rowid text, rowdt timestamp, attribute text, val text);
+INSERT INTO cth VALUES('test1','01 March 2003','temperature','42');
+INSERT INTO cth VALUES('test1','01 March 2003','test_result','PASS');
+INSERT INTO cth VALUES('test1','01 March 2003','volts','2.6987');
+INSERT INTO cth VALUES('test2','02 March 2003','temperature','53');
+INSERT INTO cth VALUES('test2','02 March 2003','test_result','FAIL');
+INSERT INTO cth VALUES('test2','02 March 2003','test_startdate','01 March 2003');
+INSERT INTO cth VALUES('test2','02 March 2003','volts','3.1234');
+
+SELECT * FROM crosstab
+(
+ 'SELECT rowid, rowdt, attribute, val FROM cth ORDER BY 1',
+ 'SELECT DISTINCT attribute FROM cth ORDER BY 1'
+)
+AS
+(
+ rowid text,
+ rowdt timestamp,
+ temperature int4,
+ test_result text,
+ test_startdate timestamp,
+ volts float8
+);
+ rowid | rowdt | temperature | test_result | test_startdate | volts
+-------+--------------------------+-------------+-------------+--------------------------+--------
+ test1 | Sat Mar 01 00:00:00 2003 | 42 | PASS | | 2.6987
+ test2 | Sun Mar 02 00:00:00 2003 | 53 | FAIL | Sat Mar 01 00:00:00 2003 | 3.1234
+(2 rows)
+</pre><p>
+ </p><p>
+ You can create predefined functions to avoid having to write out
+ the result column names and types in each query. See the examples
+ in the previous section. The underlying C function for this form
+ of <code class="function">crosstab</code> is named <code class="literal">crosstab_hash</code>.
+ </p></div><div class="sect3" id="id-1.11.7.49.5.8"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title">F.40.1.5. <code class="function">connectby</code></h4></div></div></div><a id="id-1.11.7.49.5.8.2" class="indexterm"></a><pre class="synopsis">
+connectby(text relname, text keyid_fld, text parent_keyid_fld
+ [, text orderby_fld ], text start_with, int max_depth
+ [, text branch_delim ])
+</pre><p>
+ The <code class="function">connectby</code> function produces a display of hierarchical
+ data that is stored in a table. The table must have a key field that
+ uniquely identifies rows, and a parent-key field that references the
+ parent (if any) of each row. <code class="function">connectby</code> can display the
+ sub-tree descending from any row.
+ </p><p>
+ <a class="xref" href="tablefunc.html#TABLEFUNC-CONNECTBY-PARAMETERS" title="Table F.32. connectby Parameters">Table F.32</a> explains the
+ parameters.
+ </p><div class="table" id="TABLEFUNC-CONNECTBY-PARAMETERS"><p class="title"><strong>Table F.32. <code class="function">connectby</code> Parameters</strong></p><div class="table-contents"><table class="table" summary="connectby Parameters" border="1"><colgroup><col /><col /></colgroup><thead><tr><th>Parameter</th><th>Description</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td><em class="parameter"><code>relname</code></em></td><td>Name of the source relation</td></tr><tr><td><em class="parameter"><code>keyid_fld</code></em></td><td>Name of the key field</td></tr><tr><td><em class="parameter"><code>parent_keyid_fld</code></em></td><td>Name of the parent-key field</td></tr><tr><td><em class="parameter"><code>orderby_fld</code></em></td><td>Name of the field to order siblings by (optional)</td></tr><tr><td><em class="parameter"><code>start_with</code></em></td><td>Key value of the row to start at</td></tr><tr><td><em class="parameter"><code>max_depth</code></em></td><td>Maximum depth to descend to, or zero for unlimited depth</td></tr><tr><td><em class="parameter"><code>branch_delim</code></em></td><td>String to separate keys with in branch output (optional)</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><br class="table-break" /><p>
+ The key and parent-key fields can be any data type, but they must be
+ the same type. Note that the <em class="parameter"><code>start_with</code></em> value must be
+ entered as a text string, regardless of the type of the key field.
+ </p><p>
+ The <code class="function">connectby</code> function is declared to return <code class="type">setof
+ record</code>, so the actual names and types of the output columns must be
+ defined in the <code class="literal">FROM</code> clause of the calling <code class="command">SELECT</code>
+ statement, for example:
+ </p><pre class="programlisting">
+SELECT * FROM connectby('connectby_tree', 'keyid', 'parent_keyid', 'pos', 'row2', 0, '~')
+ AS t(keyid text, parent_keyid text, level int, branch text, pos int);
+</pre><p>
+ The first two output columns are used for the current row's key and
+ its parent row's key; they must match the type of the table's key field.
+ The third output column is the depth in the tree and must be of type
+ <code class="type">integer</code>. If a <em class="parameter"><code>branch_delim</code></em> parameter was
+ given, the next output column is the branch display and must be of type
+ <code class="type">text</code>. Finally, if an <em class="parameter"><code>orderby_fld</code></em>
+ parameter was given, the last output column is a serial number, and must
+ be of type <code class="type">integer</code>.
+ </p><p>
+ The <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">branch</span>”</span> output column shows the path of keys taken to
+ reach the current row. The keys are separated by the specified
+ <em class="parameter"><code>branch_delim</code></em> string. If no branch display is
+ wanted, omit both the <em class="parameter"><code>branch_delim</code></em> parameter
+ and the branch column in the output column list.
+ </p><p>
+ If the ordering of siblings of the same parent is important,
+ include the <em class="parameter"><code>orderby_fld</code></em> parameter to
+ specify which field to order siblings by. This field can be of any
+ sortable data type. The output column list must include a final
+ integer serial-number column, if and only if
+ <em class="parameter"><code>orderby_fld</code></em> is specified.
+ </p><p>
+ The parameters representing table and field names are copied as-is
+ into the SQL queries that <code class="function">connectby</code> generates internally.
+ Therefore, include double quotes if the names are mixed-case or contain
+ special characters. You may also need to schema-qualify the table name.
+ </p><p>
+ In large tables, performance will be poor unless there is an index on
+ the parent-key field.
+ </p><p>
+ It is important that the <em class="parameter"><code>branch_delim</code></em> string
+ not appear in any key values, else <code class="function">connectby</code> may incorrectly
+ report an infinite-recursion error. Note that if
+ <em class="parameter"><code>branch_delim</code></em> is not provided, a default value
+ of <code class="literal">~</code> is used for recursion detection purposes.
+
+ </p><p>
+ Here is an example:
+</p><pre class="programlisting">
+CREATE TABLE connectby_tree(keyid text, parent_keyid text, pos int);
+
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row1',NULL, 0);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row2','row1', 0);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row3','row1', 0);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row4','row2', 1);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row5','row2', 0);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row6','row4', 0);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row7','row3', 0);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row8','row6', 0);
+INSERT INTO connectby_tree VALUES('row9','row5', 0);
+
+-- with branch, without orderby_fld (order of results is not guaranteed)
+SELECT * FROM connectby('connectby_tree', 'keyid', 'parent_keyid', 'row2', 0, '~')
+ AS t(keyid text, parent_keyid text, level int, branch text);
+ keyid | parent_keyid | level | branch
+-------+--------------+-------+---------------------
+ row2 | | 0 | row2
+ row4 | row2 | 1 | row2~row4
+ row6 | row4 | 2 | row2~row4~row6
+ row8 | row6 | 3 | row2~row4~row6~row8
+ row5 | row2 | 1 | row2~row5
+ row9 | row5 | 2 | row2~row5~row9
+(6 rows)
+
+-- without branch, without orderby_fld (order of results is not guaranteed)
+SELECT * FROM connectby('connectby_tree', 'keyid', 'parent_keyid', 'row2', 0)
+ AS t(keyid text, parent_keyid text, level int);
+ keyid | parent_keyid | level
+-------+--------------+-------
+ row2 | | 0
+ row4 | row2 | 1
+ row6 | row4 | 2
+ row8 | row6 | 3
+ row5 | row2 | 1
+ row9 | row5 | 2
+(6 rows)
+
+-- with branch, with orderby_fld (notice that row5 comes before row4)
+SELECT * FROM connectby('connectby_tree', 'keyid', 'parent_keyid', 'pos', 'row2', 0, '~')
+ AS t(keyid text, parent_keyid text, level int, branch text, pos int);
+ keyid | parent_keyid | level | branch | pos
+-------+--------------+-------+---------------------+-----
+ row2 | | 0 | row2 | 1
+ row5 | row2 | 1 | row2~row5 | 2
+ row9 | row5 | 2 | row2~row5~row9 | 3
+ row4 | row2 | 1 | row2~row4 | 4
+ row6 | row4 | 2 | row2~row4~row6 | 5
+ row8 | row6 | 3 | row2~row4~row6~row8 | 6
+(6 rows)
+
+-- without branch, with orderby_fld (notice that row5 comes before row4)
+SELECT * FROM connectby('connectby_tree', 'keyid', 'parent_keyid', 'pos', 'row2', 0)
+ AS t(keyid text, parent_keyid text, level int, pos int);
+ keyid | parent_keyid | level | pos
+-------+--------------+-------+-----
+ row2 | | 0 | 1
+ row5 | row2 | 1 | 2
+ row9 | row5 | 2 | 3
+ row4 | row2 | 1 | 4
+ row6 | row4 | 2 | 5
+ row8 | row6 | 3 | 6
+(6 rows)
+</pre><p>
+ </p></div></div><div class="sect2" id="id-1.11.7.49.6"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title">F.40.2. Author</h3></div></div></div><p>
+ Joe Conway
+ </p></div></div><div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/transitional" class="navfooter"><hr></hr><table width="100%" summary="Navigation footer"><tr><td width="40%" align="left"><a accesskey="p" href="sslinfo.html" title="F.39. sslinfo">Prev</a> </td><td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="u" href="contrib.html" title="Appendix F. Additional Supplied Modules">Up</a></td><td width="40%" align="right"> <a accesskey="n" href="tcn.html" title="F.41. tcn">Next</a></td></tr><tr><td width="40%" align="left" valign="top">F.39. sslinfo </td><td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="h" href="index.html" title="PostgreSQL 14.5 Documentation">Home</a></td><td width="40%" align="right" valign="top"> F.41. tcn</td></tr></table></div></body></html> \ No newline at end of file