I'm trying to execute the following script:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use DBI;
my $db = "Pg";
my $db_database = "whatever";
my $user = "whatever";
my $password = "whatever";
my $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:$db:dbname=$db_database", $user, $password);
my $query = $dbh->prepare (q{SELECT
arrival_date - INTERVAL '? MINUTE'
FROM emails LIMIT 1})
or die ("unable to prepare");
$query->execute(60) or die("unable to execute");
print $query->fetchrow_array, "\n";
(arrival_date has this format: timestamp with time zone NOT NULL default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP)
The problem is that the question mark placeholder is not detected because its inside single quotes:
DBD::Pg::st execute failed: called with 1 bind variables when 0 are needed
It does not help if I use qq{}, $1 placeholder, and tried a few variations with $dbh->quote. How can I make this work?
You can't use placeholders inside quotes. You can use SQL string concatenation, but in this case, it's easier to do it by using multiplication:
my $query = $dbh->prepare (q{SELECT
arrival_date - ? * INTERVAL '1 MINUTE'
FROM emails LIMIT 1});
$query->execute(60);
That way, you don't have to append ' minutes'
to the number when you execute the query.
I just found a solution here: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=321917
It works using ?::interval instead of 'interval ?':
my $query = $dbh->prepare (q{SELECT
arrival_date - ?::interval
FROM emails LIMIT 1});
$query->execute('60 MINUTE');
my $query = $dbh->prepare (<<SQL) or die ("unable to prepare");
SELECT arrival_date - INTERVAL ? FROM emails LIMIT 1
SQL
$query->execute("60 MINUTE");
or
my $query = $dbh->prepare (<<SQL) or die ("unable to prepare");
SELECT arrival_date - INTERVAL CONCAT(?, " MINUTE") FROM emails LIMIT 1
SQL
$query->execute(60);
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