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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Please Help Me... Post 302414742 by thillai_selvan on Wednesday 21st of April 2010 12:05:21 AM
Old 04-21-2010
What data you want to count?
 
MOVE(7) 						  PostgreSQL 9.2.7 Documentation						   MOVE(7)

NAME
MOVE - position a cursor SYNOPSIS
MOVE [ direction [ FROM | IN ] ] cursor_name where direction can be empty or one of: NEXT PRIOR FIRST LAST ABSOLUTE count RELATIVE count count ALL FORWARD FORWARD count FORWARD ALL BACKWARD BACKWARD count BACKWARD ALL DESCRIPTION
MOVE repositions a cursor without retrieving any data. MOVE works exactly like the FETCH command, except it only positions the cursor and does not return rows. The parameters for the MOVE command are identical to those of the FETCH command; refer to FETCH(7) for details on syntax and usage. OUTPUTS
On successful completion, a MOVE command returns a command tag of the form MOVE count The count is the number of rows that a FETCH command with the same parameters would have returned (possibly zero). EXAMPLES
BEGIN WORK; DECLARE liahona CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM films; -- Skip the first 5 rows: MOVE FORWARD 5 IN liahona; MOVE 5 -- Fetch the 6th row from the cursor liahona: FETCH 1 FROM liahona; code | title | did | date_prod | kind | len -------+--------+-----+------------+--------+------- P_303 | 48 Hrs | 103 | 1982-10-22 | Action | 01:37 (1 row) -- Close the cursor liahona and end the transaction: CLOSE liahona; COMMIT WORK; COMPATIBILITY
There is no MOVE statement in the SQL standard. SEE ALSO
CLOSE(7), DECLARE(7), FETCH(7) PostgreSQL 9.2.7 2014-02-17 MOVE(7)
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