PostgreSQL functions, also known as Stored Procedures, allow you to carry out operations that would normally take several queries and round trips in a single function within the database. Functions allow database reuse as other applications can interact directly with your stored procedures instead of a middle-tier or duplicating code.
Functions can be created in a language of your choice like SQL, PL/pgSQL, C, Python, etc.
The basic syntax to create a function is as follows −
CREATE [OR REPLACE] FUNCTION function_name (arguments) RETURNS return_datatype AS $variable_name$ DECLARE declaration; [...] BEGIN < function_body > [...] RETURN { variable_name | value } END; LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Where,
function-name specifies the name of the function.
[OR REPLACE] option allows modifying an existing function.
The function must contain a return statement.
RETURN clause specifies that data type you are going to return from the function. The return_datatype can be a base, composite, or domain type, or can reference the type of a table column.
function-body contains the executable part.
The AS keyword is used for creating a standalone function.
plpgsql is the name of the language that the function is implemented in. Here, we use this option for PostgreSQL, it Can be SQL, C, internal, or the name of a user-defined procedural language. For backward compatibility, the name can be enclosed by single quotes.
The following example illustrates creating and calling a standalone function. This function returns the total number of records in the COMPANY table. We will use the COMPANY table, which has the following records −
testdb# select * from COMPANY; id | name | age | address | salary ----+-------+-----+-----------+-------- 1 | Paul | 32 | California| 20000 2 | Allen | 25 | Texas | 15000 3 | Teddy | 23 | Norway | 20000 4 | Mark | 25 | Rich-Mond | 65000 5 | David | 27 | Texas | 85000 6 | Kim | 22 | South-Hall| 45000 7 | James | 24 | Houston | 10000 (7 rows)
Function totalRecords() is as follows −
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION totalRecords () RETURNS integer AS $total$ declare total integer; BEGIN SELECT count(*) into total FROM COMPANY; RETURN total; END; $total$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
When the above query is executed, the result would be −
testdb# CREATE FUNCTION
Now, let us execute a call to this function and check the records in the COMPANY table
testdb=# select totalRecords();
When the above query is executed, the result would be −
totalrecords -------------- 7 (1 row)