Generally when writing a query in psql
a statement will be terminated with
a semicolon. An alternative approach is to end it with a \g
instead. This
will also send the query to the Postgres server for execution.
select 1 \g
If a filename is included after the \g
, then the result of the query will
be written to that file instead of output to the psql
session.
> select 1, 2, 3 \g query_result.txt
If we cat
that file, we can see the query result.
Time: 4.293 ms
> \! cat query_result.txt
?column? | ?column? | ?column?
----------+----------+----------
1 | 2 | 3
(1 row)
See man psql
for more details.