CREATE TABLE AS
is the simplest and fastest way:
CREATE TEMP TABLE tbl AS
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE ... ;
Do not use SELECT INTO
for this purpose. See:
- Combine two tables into a new one so that select rows from the other one are ignored
Not sure whether table already exists
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ...
was added with Postgres 9.1. For older versions, see:
- PostgreSQL create table if not exists
Then:
INSERT INTO tbl (col1, col2, ...)
SELECT col1, col2, ...
Chances are, something is going wrong in your code if the temp table already exists. Make sure you don’t duplicate data in the table or something. Or consider the following paragraph …
Unique names
Temporary tables are only visible within your current session (not to be confused with transaction!). So the table name cannot conflict with other sessions. If you need unique names within your session, you could use dynamic SQL and utilize a SEQUENCE
:
Create once:
CREATE SEQUENCE tablename_helper_seq;
You could use a DO
statement (or a plpgsql function):
DO
$do$
BEGIN
EXECUTE
'CREATE TEMP TABLE tbl' || nextval('tablename_helper_seq'::regclass) || ' AS
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE ... ';
RAISE NOTICE 'Temporary table created: "tbl%"' || ', lastval();
END
$do$;
lastval()
and currval(regclass)
are instrumental to return the dynamically created table name.