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Dollar-Quoted String Constants

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the dollar-quoted string constants ($$) in user-defined functions and stored procedures.

Introduction the dollar-quoted string constant syntax

In PostgreSQL, dollar-quoted string constants allow you to construct strings that contain single quotes without a need to escape them.

For example, you can surround a string constant using single quotes like this:

select 'String constant';

But when a string constant contains a single quote ('), you need to escape it by doubling up the single quote:

select 'I''m a string constant';

To make the code more readable, PostgreSQL offers a better syntax called dollar-quoted string constant or dollar quoting:

select $$I'm a string constant$$;

In this example, we don’t have to double up the single quote.

Here’s the basic syntax of the dollar-quoted string constants:

$tag$<string_constant>$tag$

In this syntax, the tag is optional. It follows the same rules as unquoted identifiers:

  • Must begin with a letter (a-z, A-Z) or underscore.
  • Can include letters (case-insensitive), digits, and underscores.
  • Limited to 63 characters (longer ones are truncated).
  • Cannot contain whitespaces, or reserved keywords without quotes.

Between the $tag$, you can place any string including single quotes ('). For example:

select $$I'm a string constant$$ as message;

Output:

message
-----------------------
 I'm a string constant
(1 row)

In this example, we do not specify the tag between the two dollar signs($).

The following example uses the dollar-quoted string constant syntax with a tag:

SELECT $message$I'm a string constant$message$ s;

Output:

s
-----------------------
 I'm a string constant

In this example, we use the string message as a tag between the two dollar signs ($ ).

Using dollar-quoted string constants in anonymous blocks

The following shows the anonymous block in PL/pgSQL:

do
'declare
   film_count integer;
begin
   select count(*) into film_count
   from film;

   raise notice ''The number of films: %'', film_count;
end;'
;

Note that you will learn about the anonymous block in the PL/pgSQL block structure tutorial. In this tutorial, you can copy and paste the code in any PostgreSQL client tool like pgAdmin or psql to execute it.

Output:

NOTICE:  The number of films: 1000
DO

The code in a block must be surrounded by single quotes. If it has any single quote, you need to escape it by doubling it like this:

raise notice ''The number of films: %'', film_count;

To avoid escaping every single quotes and backslashes, you can use the dollar-quoted string as follows:

do
$$
declare
   film_count integer;
begin
   select count(*) into film_count
   from film;
   raise notice 'The number of films: %', film_count;
end;
$$;

Using dollar-quoted string constants in functions

The following shows the syntax of the CREATE FUNCTION statement that allows you to create a user-defined function:

create function function_name(param_list)
    returns datatype
language lang_name
as
 'function_body'

Note that you will learn about the syntax of CREATE FUNCTION statement in the creating function tutorial.

In this syntax, the function_body is a string constant. For example, the following function finds a film by its id:

create function find_film_by_id(
   id int
) returns film
language sql
as
  'select * from film
   where film_id = id';

In this example, the body of the find_film_by_id() function is surrounded by single quotes.

If the function has many statements, it becomes more difficult to read. In this case, you can use dollar-quoted string constant syntax:

create function find_film_by_id(
   id int
) returns film
language sql
as
$$
  select * from film
  where film_id = id;
$$;

Now, you can place any piece of code between the $$ and $$ without using the need to escape single quotes.

Using dollar-quoted string constants in stored procedures

Similarly, you can use the dollar-quoted string constant syntax in stored procedures like this:

create procedure proc_name(param_list)
language lang_name
as $$
  -- stored procedure body
$$

Summary

  • Use quoted-dollar string constant syntax to construct string constants without the need to escape single quotes.
  • Do use quoted-dollar string constants in anonymous blocks, user-defined functions, and stored procedures.

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