Code Inspection: Misleading references
Reports ambiguous references in SQL code.
For example, when a name refer to both a table column and a routine parameter. The execution of such code might lead to errors or unexpected results due to counter-intuitive resolution logic. Usually, names with a more local scope have higher priority. Example (PostgreSQL):CREATE TABLE foo
(
id INT,
name VARCHAR(5)
);
CREATE FUNCTION func(name VARCHAR(5)) RETURNS INT AS
$$
DECLARE
b INT;
BEGIN
-- `name` is ambiguous as it is used as a column name and a parameter
SELECT COUNT(*) INTO b FROM foo t WHERE t.name = name;
RETURN b;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
In PostgreSQL, you can use the #variable_conflict
directives to explicitly specify a correct reference. For example, use #variable_conflict use_column
to refer to a column name, or #variable_conflict use_variable
to refer to a parameter. CREATE TABLE foo
(
id INT,
name VARCHAR(5)
);
CREATE FUNCTION func(name VARCHAR(5)) RETURNS INT AS
$$
#variable_conflict use_column
DECLARE
b INT;
BEGIN
SELECT COUNT(*) INTO b FROM foo t WHERE t.name = name;
RETURN b;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
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Last modified: 11 February 2022