Exception blocks are meant for trapping errors, not checking conditions. In other words, if some condition can be handled at compile time, it should not be trapped as error but resolved by ordinary program logic.
In Trapping Errors section of PL/PgSQL documentation you can find such tip:
Tip: A block containing an EXCEPTION clause is significantly more expensive to enter and exit than a block without one. Therefore, don't use EXCEPTION without need.
Instead using exceptions (bad), or IF/THEN/ELSIF (better), you can rewrite this to one query:
SELECT c.data into data FROM doc c WHERE c.doc_id = id and ( c.group_cur > group_cur or c.global_cur > global_cur ) ORDER BY -- this will make group always preferred over global case when c.group_cur > group_cur then 1 else 2 end ASC, -- and this is your normal ordering c.id DESC limit 1;
If you really want two queries, you can use special FOUND variable to test if previous query gave any result:
select c.data into data from doc c where c.doc_id = id and c.group_cur > group_cur order by c.id desc limit 1; if not found then select c.data into data from doc c where c.doc_id = id and c.global_cur > global_cur order by c.id desc limit 1; if not found then return null; end if; end if;
Obligatory RTFM links folllow :-)
See this for description of FOUND variable, and this for IF/THEN blocks.