From: Bruce Momjian Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2010 14:40:42 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Document regexp_matches() better and show example of single-row usage. X-Git-Tag: REL9_0_BETA2~12 X-Git-Url: https://granicus.if.org/sourcecode?a=commitdiff_plain;h=0562820097800c05a89dcdbcd61d7cf262a305af;p=postgresql Document regexp_matches() better and show example of single-row usage. --- diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml index 30b3419937..51930a55fc 100644 --- a/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml +++ b/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ - + Functions and Operators @@ -3445,19 +3445,22 @@ regexp_replace('foobarbaz', 'b(..)', E'X\\1Y', 'g') - The regexp_matches function returns all of the captured - substrings resulting from matching a POSIX regular expression pattern. - It has the syntax + The regexp_matches function returns a text array of + all of the captured substrings resulting from matching a POSIX + regular expression pattern. It has the syntax regexp_matches(string, pattern , flags ). - If there is no match to the pattern, the function returns - no rows. If there is a match, the function returns a text array whose + The function can return no rows, one row, or multiple rows (see + the g flag below). If the pattern + does not match, the function returns no rows. If the pattern + contains no parenthesized subexpressions, then each row + returned is a single-element text array containing the substring + matching the whole pattern. If the pattern contains parenthesized + subexpressions, the function returns a text array whose n'th element is the substring matching the n'th parenthesized subexpression of the pattern (not counting non-capturing parentheses; see below for - details). If the pattern does not contain any parenthesized - subexpressions, then the result is a single-element text array containing - the substring matching the whole pattern. + details). The flags parameter is an optional text string containing zero or more single-letter flags that change the function's behavior. Flag g causes the function to find @@ -3487,6 +3490,16 @@ SELECT regexp_matches('foobarbequebaz', 'barbeque'); ---------------- {barbeque} (1 row) + + + + + It is possible to force regexp_matches() to always + return one row by using a sub-select; this is particularly useful + in a SELECT target list when you want all rows + returned, even non-matching ones: + +SELECT col1, (SELECT regexp_matches(col2, '(bar)(beque)')) FROM tab;