Postgres won't accept table alias before column name
-
19-06-2021 - |
Question
I'm using a framework (Jodd) which is adding the table alias to the column names in a SQL Select. It looks like well-formed SQL, but Postgres chokes on it.
update GREETING Greeting
set Greeting.ID=5,
Greeting.NAME='World',
Greeting.PHRASE='Hello World!'
where (Greeting.ID=5)
gives an error:
Error: ERROR: column "greeting" of relation "greeting" does not exist
SQLState: 42703
Is there a way to get Postgres to accept that SQL? My other alternative is to hack the framework, which I don't want to do.
Solution
The problem is that you include the table alias in SET
clause, in the columns. See the documentation of UPDATE
in Postgres docs:
column
The name of a column in
table
. The column name can be qualified with a subfield name or array subscript, if needed. Do not include the table's name in the specification of a target column — for example,UPDATE tab SET tab.col = 1
is invalid.
This is valid in Postgres:
update GREETING Greeting
set
NAME='World',
PHRASE='Hello World!'
where Greeting.ID=5 ;
OTHER TIPS
Check documentation on UPDATE
statement, specifically for the column part: it is illegal to prefix columns with table alias in the SET
clause.
UPDATE GREETING Greeting
SET ID=5, NAME='World', PHRASE='Hello World!'
WHERE (Greeting.ID=5);
Try using the latest Jodd, v3.3.7. where this issue is fixed.
The problem was in the Jodd library: entity update methods were generating update statement with table aliases. The new version simply does not put table aliases; that works for Postgres and for other databases too.
As others have said, it is illegal with postgres to use an alias for the name of the column that is being updated but note that it is possible (and sometimes necessary) to use an alias in the rhs expression. For instance:
CREATE TABLE greetings (name VARCHAR(20), phrase VARCHAR(100));
INSERT INTO greetings (name, phrase);
VALUES ('palindrome_1', 'Rise to vote sir'),
('palindrome_2', 'Race fast, safe car');
-- You can do something like this:
UPDATE greetings g SET phrase = REVERSE (g.phrase);
-- ^
-- |
-- +--- this works
This is a bit silly in this example because we don't need that alias. This becomes more useful when multiples tables are involved.