Ian,
You're welcome. Replying to the list for the edification of other users.
-Josh
> I just figgered it out. I declared the function as
>
> create function some_func(test) returns int ...
>
> where test is the name of a table. The values are passed as a tcl array. I
will see if RECORD works too. I wonder if that would eliminate the problem I
ran into where I had dropped and recreated the table. The function barfed
since the OID for the user defined type "test" did not exist.
>
> This will work slick. Thanks!
>
> >>> Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com> 12/09/02 12:29PM >>>
> Ian,
>
> > That makes sense! Is that psuedo code, or is there a way to send a
function
> the entire NEW array without specifying each column name and datatype
> specifically.
> >
> > I am using pltcl, if that matters..
>
> Not sure about pltcl. I'd say, try it, declare the function as:
>
> CREATE FUNCTION some_func (RECORD) and see how things go.
>
> --
> -Josh Berkus
>
> ______AGLIO DATABASE SOLUTIONS___________________________
> Josh Berkus
> Complete information technology josh@agliodbs.com
> and data management solutions (415) 565-7293
> for law firms, small businesses fax 621-2533
> and non-profit organizations. San Francisco
>
>
>
--
-Josh Berkus
______AGLIO DATABASE SOLUTIONS___________________________ Josh Berkus Complete
informationtechnology josh@agliodbs.com and data management solutions (415) 565-7293 for law firms, small
businesses fax 621-2533 and non-profit organizations. San Francisco