From: | Darko Prenosil <darko(dot)prenosil(at)finteh(dot)hr> |
---|---|
To: | Postgresql General <pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: Why lower's not accept an AS declaration ? |
Date: | 2003-08-18 11:15:38 |
Message-ID: | 200308181315.39013.darko.prenosil@finteh.hr |
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Lists: | pgsql-general |
On Monday 18 August 2003 13:04, Darko Prenosil wrote:
> On Monday 18 August 2003 10:20, Hervé Piedvache wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > May be my question is stupid ... but I'm a little suprised :
> >
> > SELECT id_letter as letter from my_table;
> >
> > letter
> > -----
> > B
> > C
> > a
> > A
> >
> > SELECT id_letter as letter from my_table order by letter;
> >
> > letter
> > -----
> > A
> > B
> > C
> > a
> >
> > SELECT id_letter as letter from my_table order by lower(letter);
> >
> > ERROR: Attribute "letter" not found
>
> Why did you change column name to "letter" in last query, and all the other
> queries have "id_letter" as column name. What is table structure exactly ?
> I assume that You don't have column with "letter" at all.
>
> Regards !
OK, now I see exactly the mistake You are making:
SELECT id_letter as letter from my_table order by lower(id_letter);
would be correct query, because "letter" is only alias for result column, not
column in "my_table". Sorry I didn't see it first time.
Regards !
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