Reputation: 12552
I am looking for a way to return the number of rows affected by a DELETE clause in PostgreSQL. The documentation states that;
On successful completion, a DELETE command returns a command tag of the form
DELETE count
The count is the number of rows deleted. If count is 0, no rows matched the condition (this is not considered an error).
If the DELETE command contains a RETURNING clause, the result will be similar to that of a SELECT statement containing the columns and values defined in the RETURNING list, computed over the row(s) deleted by the command.
But I am having trouble finding a good example of it. Can anyone help me with this, how can I find out how many rows were deleted?
EDIT: I wanted to present an alternative that I have found later. It can be found in here, explained under 38.5.5. Obtaining the Result Status title.
Upvotes: 75
Views: 60154
Reputation: 3807
This works in functions. It works with other operations like INSERT as well.
DECLARE _result INTEGER;
...
DELETE FROM mytable WHERE amount = 0; -- or whatever other operation you desire
GET DIAGNOSTICS _result = ROW_COUNT;
IF _result > 0 THEN
RAISE NOTICE 'Removed % rows with amount = 0', _result;
END IF;
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 923
GET DIAGNOSTICS is used to display number of modified/deleted records.
Sample code
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION fnName()
RETURNS void AS
$BODY$
declare
count numeric;
begin
count := 0;
LOOP
-- condition here update or delete;
GET DIAGNOSTICS count = ROW_COUNT;
raise notice 'Value: %', count;
end loop;
end;
$BODY$a
Upvotes: 20
Reputation: 2354
You can use RETURNING
clause:
DELETE FROM table WHERE condition IS TRUE RETURNING *;
After that you just have to check number of rows returned. You can streamline it with CTE:
WITH deleted AS (DELETE FROM table WHERE condition IS TRUE RETURNING *) SELECT count(*) FROM deleted;
This should return just the number of deleted rows.
Upvotes: 177
Reputation: 895
in Python using psycopg2, the rowcount attribute can be used. Here is an example to find out how many rows were deleted...
cur = connection.cursor()
try:
cur.execute("DELETE FROM table WHERE col1 = %s", (value,))
connection.commit()
count = cur.rowcount
cur.close()
print("A total of %s rows were deleted." % count)
except:
connection.rollback()
print("An error as occurred, No rows were deleted")
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 6334
This should be simple in Java.
Statement stmt = connection.createStatement();
int rowsAffected = stmt.executeUpdate("delete from your_table");
System.out.println("deleted: " + rowsAffected);
See java.sql.Statement.
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 62573
You need the PQcmdTuples
function from libpq
. Which in PHP for example is wrapped as pg_affected_rows
.
Upvotes: -7