I use PostgreSQL 9.1.2 and I have a basic table as below, where I have the Survival status of an entry as a boolean (Survival) and also in number of days (Survival(Days)).
I have manually added a new column named 1-yr Survival and now I want to fill in the values of this column for each entry in the table, conditioned on that entry’s Survival and Survival (Days) column values. Once , completed the database table would look something like this:
Survival Survival(Days) 1-yr Survival
---------- -------------- -------------
Dead 200 NO
Alive - YES
Dead 1200 YES
The pseudo code to input the conditioned values of 1-yr Survival would be something like:
ALTER TABLE mytable ADD COLUMN "1-yr Survival" text
for each row
if ("Survival" = Dead & "Survival(Days)" < 365) then Update "1-yr Survival" = NO
else Update "1-yr Survival" = YES
end
I believe this is a basic operation however I failed to find the postgresql syntax to execute it. Some search results return “adding a trigger”, but I am not sure that is what I neeed. I think my situation here is a lot simpler. Any help/advice would be greatly appreciated.
The one-time operation can be achieved with a plain
UPDATE:I would advise not to use camel-case, white-space and parenthesis in your names. While allowed between double-quotes, it often leads to complications and confusion. Consider the chapter about identifiers and key words in the manual.
Are you aware that you can export the results of a query as CSV with
COPY?Example:
You wouldn’t need the redundant column this way to begin with.
Additional answer to comment
To avoid empty updates:
Personally, I would only add such redundant columns if I had a compelling reason. Normally I wouldn’t. If it’s about performance: are you aware of indexes on expressions and partial indexes?