1252748
1252748

Reputation: 15372

cannot get simple PostgreSQL insert to work

I'm trying to do a simple insert into a postgres table, but am getting an error that the value I'm trying to insert is being interpreted as a column name

INSERT INTO "imageTagBusinessMainCategory"
(id, businessMainCategory)
VALUES
(DEFAULT, "auto dealer")

Where id is set up to be the primary key, and auto increment, and not null. Those are the boxes I ticked when I set up the table in phpPgAdmin.

I'm getting this error though:

ERROR: ERROR: column "auto dealer" does not exist
Query = INSERT
INTO "imageTagBusinessMainCategory"
(id, businessMainCategory)
VALUES
(DEFAULT,
"auto dealer")

I've put my table name in double quotes, as I've read here I should.

And used DEFAULT to auto-increment the id as I've read here I should.

Any ideas? Thanks!

Upvotes: 141

Views: 92610

Answers (4)

Cristea
Cristea

Reputation: 1077

On my case I had to change column name from camelCase 'isAdmin' to snake_case 'is_admin'.

Upvotes: 0

randomness
randomness

Reputation: 1447

Postgres, Oracle etc expect the column name to be in quotes if they have mixed case. So either create a convention of all small or all caps for your table columns or use quotes as David Faber suggested

INSERT INTO "imageTagBusinessMainCategory"
("businessMainCategory")
VALUES
('auto dealer')

Upvotes: 5

Randy
Randy

Reputation: 16677

INSERT INTO "imageTagBusinessMainCategory"
("businessMainCategory")
VALUES
('auto dealer')

EDIT: Added double-quotes around the column name

Upvotes: 12

Matt
Matt

Reputation: 4775

Use 'auto dealer' instead. PostgreSQL interprets " as being quotes for identifiers, ' as being quotes for strings.

Also:

  • If this is a new project, just don't use mixed case tables; it is a source of frustration later. Instead of being able to use any case in your SQL statements, you must both quote the identifier name and get the case correct.

  • There is no need to specify id/DEFAULT, you're asking it to do what it would have done already. I haven't met a DBMS that requires you to include columnName/DEFAULT if you want it to put the default value in the column, so I don't think this extra KV pair is going to make what is happening clearer to anyone reading your code later.

Upvotes: 241

Related Questions