This is not possible with a simple DEFAULT
value, as the manual clearly states:
The value is any variable-free expression (subqueries and
cross-references to other columns in the current table are not allowed).
You could use a trigger instead:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION trg_foo_b_default()
RETURNS trigger
LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$func$
BEGIN
-- For just a few constant options, CASE does the job:
NEW.b := CASE NEW.a
WHEN 'peter' THEN 'doctor'
WHEN 'weirdo' THEN 'shrink'
WHEN 'django' THEN 'undertaker'
ELSE NULL
END;
/*
-- For more, or dynamic options, consider a lookup table:
SELECT INTO NEW.b t.b
FROM def_tbl t
WHERE t.a = NEW.a;
*/
RETURN NEW;
END
$func$;
CREATE TRIGGER b_default
BEFORE INSERT ON foo
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (NEW.b IS NULL AND NEW.a IS NOT NULL)
EXECUTE PROCEDURE trg_foo_b_default();
To make it more efficient use a WHEN
clause in the trigger definition (available since Postgres 9.0): This way the trigger function is only executed, when it's actually useful. (Assuming we can let b IS NULL
slide if a IS NULL
.)
Works in a similar, but subtly different fashion from a DEFAULT
value.
With a default value, you can explicitly insert NULL
to overrule the default. That's not possible here, NULL
in b
is replaced with the value derived from a
.
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