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$PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml,v 1.215 2004/08/03 20:32:31 tgl Exp $
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PostgreSQL documentation
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 <chapter id="functions">
  <title>Functions and Operators</title>

  <indexterm zone="functions">
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   <primary>function</primary>
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  </indexterm>

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  <indexterm zone="functions">
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   <primary>operator</primary>
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  </indexterm>

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  <para>
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   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> provides a large number of
   functions and operators for the built-in data types.  Users can also
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   define their own functions and operators, as described in
   <xref linkend="server-programming">.  The
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   <application>psql</application> commands <command>\df</command> and
   <command>\do</command> can be used to show the list of all actually
   available functions and operators, respectively.
  </para>
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  <para>
   If you are concerned about portability then take note that most of
   the functions and operators described in this chapter, with the
   exception of the most trivial arithmetic and comparison operators
   and some explicitly marked functions, are not specified by the
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   <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard. Some of the extended functionality
   is present in other <acronym>SQL</acronym> database management
   systems, and in many cases this functionality is compatible and
   consistent between the various implementations.
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  </para>
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  <sect1 id="functions-logical">
   <title>Logical Operators</title>

   <indexterm zone="functions-logical">
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    <primary>operator</primary>
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    <secondary>logical</secondary>
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   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
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    <primary>Boolean</primary>
    <secondary>operators</secondary>
    <see>operators, logical</see>
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   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    The usual logical operators are available:
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    <indexterm>
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     <primary>AND (operator)</primary>
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    </indexterm>
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    <indexterm>
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     <primary>OR (operator)</primary>
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    </indexterm>
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    <indexterm>
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     <primary>NOT (operator)</primary>
    </indexterm>

    <indexterm>
     <primary>conjunction</primary>
    </indexterm>

    <indexterm>
     <primary>disjunction</primary>
    </indexterm>

    <indexterm>
     <primary>negation</primary>
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    </indexterm>
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    <simplelist>
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     <member><literal>AND</></member>
     <member><literal>OR</></member>
     <member><literal>NOT</></member>
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    </simplelist>
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    <acronym>SQL</acronym> uses a three-valued Boolean logic where the null value represents
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    <quote>unknown</quote>.  Observe the following truth tables:

    <informaltable>
     <tgroup cols="4">
      <thead>
       <row>
        <entry><replaceable>a</replaceable></entry>
        <entry><replaceable>b</replaceable></entry>
        <entry><replaceable>a</replaceable> AND <replaceable>b</replaceable></entry>
        <entry><replaceable>a</replaceable> OR <replaceable>b</replaceable></entry>
       </row>
      </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </informaltable>

    <informaltable>
     <tgroup cols="2">
      <thead>
       <row>
        <entry><replaceable>a</replaceable></entry>
        <entry>NOT <replaceable>a</replaceable></entry>
       </row>
      </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
       </row>
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       <row>
        <entry>FALSE</entry>
        <entry>TRUE</entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
        <entry>NULL</entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </informaltable>
   </para>
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   <para>
    The operators <literal>AND</literal> and <literal>OR</literal> are
    commutative, that is, you can switch the left and right operand
    without affecting the result.  But see <xref
    linkend="syntax-express-eval"> for more information about the
    order of evaluation of subexpressions.
   </para>
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  </sect1>

  <sect1 id="functions-comparison">
   <title>Comparison Operators</title>

   <indexterm zone="functions-comparison">
    <primary>comparison</primary>
    <secondary>operators</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    The usual comparison operators are available, shown in <xref
    linkend="functions-comparison-table">.
   </para>

   <table id="functions-comparison-table">
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    <title>Comparison Operators</title>
    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
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      <row>
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       <entry>Operator</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
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      </row>
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     </thead>
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     <tbody>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>&lt;</literal> </entry>
       <entry>less than</entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>&gt;</literal> </entry>
       <entry>greater than</entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>&lt;=</literal> </entry>
       <entry>less than or equal to</entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>&gt;=</literal> </entry>
       <entry>greater than or equal to</entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>=</literal> </entry>
       <entry>equal</entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> or <literal>!=</literal> </entry>
       <entry>not equal</entry>
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      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
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   </table>
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   <note>
    <para>
     The <literal>!=</literal> operator is converted to
     <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> in the parser stage.  It is not
     possible to implement <literal>!=</literal> and
     <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> operators that do different things.
    </para>
   </note>
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   <para>
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    Comparison operators are available for all data types where this
    makes sense.  All comparison operators are binary operators that
    return values of type <type>boolean</type>; expressions like
    <literal>1 &lt; 2 &lt; 3</literal> are not valid (because there is
    no <literal>&lt;</literal> operator to compare a Boolean value with
    <literal>3</literal>).
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   </para>
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   <para>
    <indexterm>
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     <primary>BETWEEN</primary>
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    </indexterm>
    In addition to the comparison operators, the special
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    <token>BETWEEN</token> construct is available.<indexterm><primary>BETWEEN</primary></indexterm>
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<synopsis>
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<replaceable>a</replaceable> BETWEEN <replaceable>x</replaceable> AND <replaceable>y</replaceable>
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</synopsis>
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    is equivalent to
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<synopsis>
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<replaceable>a</replaceable> &gt;= <replaceable>x</replaceable> AND <replaceable>a</replaceable> &lt;= <replaceable>y</replaceable>
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</synopsis>
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    Similarly,
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<synopsis>
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<replaceable>a</replaceable> NOT BETWEEN <replaceable>x</replaceable> AND <replaceable>y</replaceable>
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</synopsis>
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    is equivalent to
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<synopsis>
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<replaceable>a</replaceable> &lt; <replaceable>x</replaceable> OR <replaceable>a</replaceable> &gt; <replaceable>y</replaceable>
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</synopsis>
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    There is no difference between the two respective forms apart from
    the <acronym>CPU</acronym> cycles required to rewrite the first one
    into the second one internally.
   </para>
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   <para>
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    To check whether a value is or is not null, use the constructs
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<synopsis>
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<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS NULL
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS NOT NULL
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</synopsis>
    or the equivalent, but nonstandard, constructs
<synopsis>
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<replaceable>expression</replaceable> ISNULL
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> NOTNULL
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</synopsis>
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    <indexterm><primary>null value</primary><secondary>comparing</secondary></indexterm>
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   </para>
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   <para>
    Do <emphasis>not</emphasis> write
    <literal><replaceable>expression</replaceable> = NULL</literal>
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    because <literal>NULL</> is not <quote>equal to</quote>
    <literal>NULL</>.  (The null value represents an unknown value,
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    and it is not known whether two unknown values are equal.) This
    behavior conforms to the SQL standard.
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   </para>
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   <para>
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    Some applications may expect that
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    <literal><replaceable>expression</replaceable> = NULL</literal>
    returns true if <replaceable>expression</replaceable> evaluates to
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    the null value.  It is highly recommended that these applications
    be modified to comply with the SQL standard. However, if that
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    cannot be done the <xref linkend="guc-transform-null-equals">
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    configuration variable is available. If it is enabled,
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will convert <literal>x =
    NULL</literal> clauses to <literal>x IS NULL</literal>.  This was
    the default behavior in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
    releases 6.5 through 7.1.
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   </para>
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   <para>
    Boolean values can also be tested using the constructs
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<synopsis>
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<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS TRUE
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS NOT TRUE
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS FALSE
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS NOT FALSE
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS UNKNOWN
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IS NOT UNKNOWN
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</synopsis>
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    These are similar to <literal>IS NULL</literal> in that they will
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    always return true or false, never a null value, even when the operand is null.
    A null input is treated as the logical value <quote>unknown</>.
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   </para>
  </sect1>
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  <sect1 id="functions-math">
   <title>Mathematical Functions and Operators</title>
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   <para>
    Mathematical operators are provided for many
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> types. For types without
    common mathematical conventions for all possible permutations 
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    (e.g., date/time types) we
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    describe the actual behavior in subsequent sections.
   </para>
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   <para>
    <xref linkend="functions-math-op-table"> shows the available mathematical operators.
   </para>

   <table id="functions-math-op-table">
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    <title>Mathematical Operators</title>
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    <tgroup cols="4">
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     <thead>
      <row>
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       <entry>Operator</entry>
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       <entry>Description</entry>
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       <entry>Example</entry>
       <entry>Result</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

     <tbody>
      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>addition</entry>
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       <entry><literal>2 + 3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>5</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>subtraction</entry>
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       <entry><literal>2 - 3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>-1</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>*</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>multiplication</entry>
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       <entry><literal>2 * 3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>6</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>/</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>division (integer division truncates results)</entry>
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       <entry><literal>4 / 2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>2</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>%</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>modulo (remainder)</entry>
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       <entry><literal>5 % 4</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>1</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>^</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>exponentiation</entry>
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       <entry><literal>2.0 ^ 3.0</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>8</literal></entry>
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      </row>

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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>|/</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>square root</entry>
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       <entry><literal>|/ 25.0</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>5</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>||/</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>cube root</entry>
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       <entry><literal>||/ 27.0</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>3</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>!</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>factorial</entry>
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       <entry><literal>5 !</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>120</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>!!</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>factorial (prefix operator)</entry>
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       <entry><literal>!! 5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>120</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>@</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>absolute value</entry>
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       <entry><literal>@ -5.0</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>5</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>&amp;</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>bitwise AND</entry>
       <entry><literal>91 &amp; 15</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>11</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>|</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>bitwise OR</entry>
       <entry><literal>32 | 3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>35</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>#</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>bitwise XOR</entry>
       <entry><literal>17 # 5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>20</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
       <entry> <literal>~</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>bitwise NOT</entry>
       <entry><literal>~1</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>-2</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>&lt;&lt;</literal> </entry>
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       <entry>bitwise shift left</entry>
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       <entry><literal>1 &lt;&lt; 4</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>16</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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      <row>
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       <entry> <literal>&gt;&gt;</literal> </entry>
       <entry>bitwise shift right</entry>
       <entry><literal>8 &gt;&gt; 2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>2</literal></entry>
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      </row>
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     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
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   <para>
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    The bitwise operators work only on integral data types, whereas
    the others are available for all numeric data types.  The bitwise
    operators are also available for the bit
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    string types <type>bit</type> and <type>bit varying</type>, as
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    shown in <xref linkend="functions-bit-string-op-table">.
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   </para>
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  <para>
   <xref linkend="functions-math-func-table"> shows the available
   mathematical functions.  In the table, <literal>dp</literal>
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   indicates <type>double precision</type>.  Many of these functions
   are provided in multiple forms with different argument types.
   Except where noted, any given form of a function returns the same
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   data type as its argument.
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   The functions working with <type>double precision</type> data are mostly
   implemented on top of the host system's C library; accuracy and behavior in
   boundary cases may therefore vary depending on the host system.
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  </para>
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   <table id="functions-math-func-table">
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    <title>Mathematical Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="5">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Function</entry>
       <entry>Return Type</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
       <entry>Example</entry>
       <entry>Result</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

     <tbody>
      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>abs</>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry>(same as <replaceable>x</>)</entry>
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       <entry>absolute value</entry>
       <entry><literal>abs(-17.4)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>17.4</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>cbrt</function>(<type>dp</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><type>dp</type></entry>
       <entry>cube root</entry>
       <entry><literal>cbrt(27.0)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>3</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>ceil</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
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       <entry>smallest integer not less than argument</entry>
       <entry><literal>ceil(-42.8)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>-42</literal></entry>
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      </row>

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      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>ceiling</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
       <entry>smallest integer not less than argument (alias for <function>ceil</function>)</entry>
       <entry><literal>ceiling(-95.3)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>-95</literal></entry>
      </row>

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      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>degrees</function>(<type>dp</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><type>dp</type></entry>
       <entry>radians to degrees</entry>
       <entry><literal>degrees(0.5)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>28.6478897565412</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>exp</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
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       <entry>exponential</entry>
       <entry><literal>exp(1.0)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>2.71828182845905</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>floor</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
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       <entry>largest integer not greater than argument</entry>
       <entry><literal>floor(-42.8)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>-43</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>ln</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
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       <entry>natural logarithm</entry>
       <entry><literal>ln(2.0)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>0.693147180559945</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>log</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
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       <entry>base 10 logarithm</entry>
       <entry><literal>log(100.0)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>2</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>log</function>(<parameter>b</parameter> <type>numeric</type>,
        <parameter>x</parameter> <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><type>numeric</type></entry>
       <entry>logarithm to base <parameter>b</parameter></entry>
       <entry><literal>log(2.0, 64.0)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>6.0000000000</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>mod</function>(<parameter>y</parameter>,
        <parameter>x</parameter>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry>(same as argument types)</entry>
       <entry>remainder of <parameter>y</parameter>/<parameter>x</parameter></entry>
       <entry><literal>mod(9,4)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>1</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>pi</function>()</literal></entry>
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       <entry><type>dp</type></entry>
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       <entry><quote>&pi;</quote> constant</entry>
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       <entry><literal>pi()</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>3.14159265358979</literal></entry>
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      </row>

      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>power</function>(<parameter>a</parameter> <type>dp</type>,
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        <parameter>b</parameter> <type>dp</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><type>dp</type></entry>
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       <entry><parameter>a</> raised to the power of <parameter>b</parameter></entry>
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       <entry><literal>power(9.0, 3.0)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><literal>729</literal></entry>
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      </row>

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      <row>
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       <entry><literal><function>power</function>(<parameter>a</parameter> <type>numeric</type>,
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        <parameter>b</parameter> <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
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       <entry><type>numeric</type></entry>
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       <entry><parameter>a</> raised to the power of <parameter>b</parameter></entry>
636
       <entry><literal>power(9.0, 3.0)</literal></entry>
637
       <entry><literal>729</literal></entry>
638 639
      </row>

640
      <row>
641
       <entry><literal><function>radians</function>(<type>dp</type>)</literal></entry>
642 643 644
       <entry><type>dp</type></entry>
       <entry>degrees to radians</entry>
       <entry><literal>radians(45.0)</literal></entry>
645
       <entry><literal>0.785398163397448</literal></entry>
646 647 648
      </row>

      <row>
649
       <entry><literal><function>random</function>()</literal></entry>
650
       <entry><type>dp</type></entry>
651
       <entry>random value between 0.0 and 1.0</entry>
652 653 654 655 656
       <entry><literal>random()</literal></entry>
       <entry></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
657
       <entry><literal><function>round</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
658
       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
659 660
       <entry>round to nearest integer</entry>
       <entry><literal>round(42.4)</literal></entry>
661
       <entry><literal>42</literal></entry>
662 663 664
      </row>

      <row>
665
       <entry><literal><function>round</function>(<parameter>v</parameter> <type>numeric</type>, <parameter>s</parameter> <type>integer</type>)</literal></entry>
666 667 668
       <entry><type>numeric</type></entry>
       <entry>round to <parameter>s</parameter> decimal places</entry>
       <entry><literal>round(42.4382, 2)</literal></entry>
669
       <entry><literal>42.44</literal></entry>
670
      </row>
671 672

      <row>
673
       <entry><literal><function>setseed</function>(<type>dp</type>)</literal></entry>
674
       <entry><type>int32</type></entry>
675
       <entry>set seed for subsequent <literal>random()</literal> calls</entry>
676
       <entry><literal>setseed(0.54823)</literal></entry>
677
       <entry><literal>1177314959</literal></entry>
678 679
      </row>

680
      <row>
681
       <entry><literal><function>sign</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
682
       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
683 684
       <entry>sign of the argument (-1, 0, +1)</entry>
       <entry><literal>sign(-8.4)</literal></entry>
685
       <entry><literal>-1</literal></entry>
686
      </row>
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688
      <row>
689
       <entry><literal><function>sqrt</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
690
       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
691 692
       <entry>square root</entry>
       <entry><literal>sqrt(2.0)</literal></entry>
693
       <entry><literal>1.4142135623731</literal></entry>
694
      </row>
695

696
      <row>
697
       <entry><literal><function>trunc</function>(<type>dp</type> or <type>numeric</type>)</literal></entry>
698
       <entry>(same as input)</entry>
699 700
       <entry>truncate toward zero</entry>
       <entry><literal>trunc(42.8)</literal></entry>
701
       <entry><literal>42</literal></entry>
702
      </row>
703

704
      <row>
705
       <entry><literal><function>trunc</function>(<parameter>v</parameter> <type>numeric</type>, <parameter>s</parameter> <type>integer</type>)</literal></entry>
706 707 708
       <entry><type>numeric</type></entry>
       <entry>truncate to <parameter>s</parameter> decimal places</entry>
       <entry><literal>trunc(42.4382, 2)</literal></entry>
709
       <entry><literal>42.43</literal></entry>
710
      </row>
711

712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>width_bucket</function>(<parameter>op</parameter> <type>numeric</type>, <parameter>b1</parameter> <type>numeric</type>, <parameter>b2</parameter> <type>numeric</type>, <parameter>count</parameter> <type>integer</type>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
       <entry>return the bucket to which <parameter>operand</> would
       be assigned in an equidepth histogram with <parameter>count</>
       buckets, an upper bound of <parameter>b1</>, and a lower bound
       of <parameter>b2</></entry>
       <entry><literal>width_bucket(5.35, 0.024, 10.06, 5)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>3</literal></entry>
      </row>
722 723 724
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
725

726 727 728
  <para>
   Finally, <xref linkend="functions-math-trig-table"> shows the
   available trigonometric functions.  All trigonometric functions
729
   take arguments and return values of type <type>double
730 731
   precision</type>.
  </para>
732

733
   <table id="functions-math-trig-table">
734
    <title>Trigonometric Functions</title>
735

736 737 738 739 740 741 742
    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Function</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>
743

744 745
     <tbody>
      <row>
746
       <entry><literal><function>acos</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
747 748
       <entry>inverse cosine</entry>
      </row>
749

750
      <row>
751
       <entry><literal><function>asin</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
752 753
       <entry>inverse sine</entry>
      </row>
754

755
      <row>
756
       <entry><literal><function>atan</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
757 758
       <entry>inverse tangent</entry>
      </row>
759

760
      <row>
761 762
       <entry><literal><function>atan2</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>,
        <replaceable>y</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
763
       <entry>inverse tangent of
764
        <literal><replaceable>x</replaceable>/<replaceable>y</replaceable></literal></entry>
765
      </row>
766

767
      <row>
768
       <entry><literal><function>cos</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
769 770
       <entry>cosine</entry>
      </row>
771

772
      <row>
773
       <entry><literal><function>cot</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
774 775
       <entry>cotangent</entry>
      </row>
776

777
      <row>
778
       <entry><literal><function>sin</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
779 780
       <entry>sine</entry>
      </row>
781

782
      <row>
783
       <entry><literal><function>tan</function>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
784 785 786 787 788
       <entry>tangent</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
789

790
  </sect1>
791 792


793 794
  <sect1 id="functions-string">
   <title>String Functions and Operators</title>
795

796 797 798
   <para>
    This section describes functions and operators for examining and
    manipulating string values.  Strings in this context include values
799 800
    of all the types <type>character</type>, <type>character
     varying</type>, and <type>text</type>.  Unless otherwise noted, all
801 802
    of the functions listed below work on all of these types, but be
    wary of potential effects of the automatic padding when using the
803
    <type>character</type> type.  Generally, the functions described
804 805
    here also work on data of non-string types by converting that data
    to a string representation first.  Some functions also exist
806
    natively for the bit-string types.
807
   </para>
808

809 810
   <para>
    <acronym>SQL</acronym> defines some string functions with a special syntax where
811
    certain key words rather than commas are used to separate the
812 813 814 815
    arguments.  Details are in <xref linkend="functions-string-sql">.
    These functions are also implemented using the regular syntax for
    function invocation.  (See <xref linkend="functions-string-other">.)
   </para>
816

817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828
   <table id="functions-string-sql">
    <title><acronym>SQL</acronym> String Functions and Operators</title>
    <tgroup cols="5">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Function</entry>
       <entry>Return Type</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
       <entry>Example</entry>
       <entry>Result</entry>  
      </row>
     </thead>
829

830 831
     <tbody>
      <row>
832 833
       <entry><literal><parameter>string</parameter> <literal>||</literal>
        <parameter>string</parameter></literal></entry>
834 835
       <entry> <type>text</type> </entry>
       <entry>
836
        String concatenation
837
        <indexterm>
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         <primary>character string</primary>
839 840 841
         <secondary>concatenation</secondary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
842
       <entry><literal>'Post' || 'greSQL'</literal></entry>
843 844
       <entry><literal>PostgreSQL</literal></entry>
      </row>
845

846
      <row>
847
       <entry><literal><function>bit_length</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
848
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
849
       <entry>Number of bits in string</entry>
850 851 852
       <entry><literal>bit_length('jose')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>32</literal></entry>
      </row>
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853

854
      <row>
855
       <entry><literal><function>char_length</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal> or <literal><function>character_length</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
856 857
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
       <entry>
858
        Number of characters in string
859
        <indexterm>
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860
         <primary>character string</primary>
861 862 863 864
         <secondary>length</secondary>
        </indexterm>
        <indexterm>
         <primary>length</primary>
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865
         <secondary sortas="character string">of a character string</secondary>
866 867 868 869 870 871
         <see>character strings, length</see>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>char_length('jose')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>4</literal></entry>
      </row>
872

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873
      <row>
874 875
       <entry><literal><function>convert</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>
       using <parameter>conversion_name</parameter>)</literal></entry>
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876
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884
       <entry>
        Change encoding using specified conversion name.  Conversions
        can be defined by <command>CREATE CONVERSION</command>.  Also
        there are some pre-defined conversion names. See <xref
        linkend="conversion-names"> for available conversion
        names.
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>convert('PostgreSQL' using iso_8859_1_to_utf_8)</literal></entry>
885
       <entry><literal>'PostgreSQL'</literal> in Unicode (UTF-8) encoding</entry>
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886 887
      </row>

888
      <row>
889
       <entry><literal><function>lower</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
890
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
891
       <entry>Convert string to lower case</entry>
892 893 894
       <entry><literal>lower('TOM')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>tom</literal></entry>
      </row>
895

896
      <row>
897
       <entry><literal><function>octet_length</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
898
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
899
       <entry>Number of bytes in string</entry>
900 901 902
       <entry><literal>octet_length('jose')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>4</literal></entry>
      </row>
903

904
      <row>
905
       <entry><literal><function>overlay</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> placing <parameter>string</parameter> from <type>integer</type> <optional>for <type>integer</type></optional>)</literal></entry>
906 907
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
908
        Replace substring
909 910 911 912 913 914 915
        <indexterm>
         <primary>overlay</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>overlay('Txxxxas' placing 'hom' from 2 for 4)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>Thomas</literal></entry>
      </row>
916

917
      <row>
918
       <entry><literal><function>position</function>(<parameter>substring</parameter> in <parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
919
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
920
       <entry>Location of specified substring</entry>
921 922 923
       <entry><literal>position('om' in 'Thomas')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>3</literal></entry>
      </row>
924

925
      <row>
926
       <entry><literal><function>substring</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <optional>from <type>integer</type></optional> <optional>for <type>integer</type></optional>)</literal></entry>
927 928
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
929
        Extract substring
930 931 932 933 934 935 936
        <indexterm>
         <primary>substring</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>substring('Thomas' from 2 for 3)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>hom</literal></entry>
      </row>
937

938
      <row>
939
       <entry><literal><function>substring</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> from <replaceable>pattern</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
940 941
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
942
        Extract substring matching POSIX regular expression
943 944 945 946
        <indexterm>
         <primary>substring</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
947
       <entry><literal>substring('Thomas' from '...$')</literal></entry>
948 949
       <entry><literal>mas</literal></entry>
      </row>
950

951
      <row>
952
       <entry><literal><function>substring</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> from <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> for <replaceable>escape</replaceable>)</literal></entry>
953 954
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
955 956
        Extract substring matching <acronym>SQL</acronym> regular
        expression
957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964
        <indexterm>
         <primary>substring</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>substring('Thomas' from '%#"o_a#"_' for '#')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>oma</literal></entry>
      </row>

965 966
      <row>
       <entry>
967
        <literal><function>trim</function>(<optional>leading | trailing | both</optional>
968
        <optional><parameter>characters</parameter></optional> from
969
        <parameter>string</parameter>)</literal>
970 971 972
       </entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
973
        Remove the longest string containing only the
974
        <parameter>characters</parameter> (a space by default) from the
975
        start/end/both ends of the <parameter>string</parameter>.
976 977 978 979
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>trim(both 'x' from 'xTomxx')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>Tom</literal></entry>
      </row>
980

981
      <row>
982
       <entry><literal><function>upper</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
983
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
984
       <entry>Convert string to uppercase</entry>
985 986 987 988 989 990
       <entry><literal>upper('tom')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>TOM</literal></entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
991

992 993
   <para>
    Additional string manipulation functions are available and are
994 995
    listed in <xref linkend="functions-string-other">.  Some of them are used internally to implement the
    <acronym>SQL</acronym>-standard string functions listed in <xref linkend="functions-string-sql">.
996 997 998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012
   </para>

   <table id="functions-string-other">
    <title>Other String Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="5">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Function</entry>
       <entry>Return Type</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
       <entry>Example</entry>
       <entry>Result</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

     <tbody>
      <row>
1013
       <entry><literal><function>ascii</function>(<type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
1014
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
1015
       <entry><acronym>ASCII</acronym> code of the first character of the argument</entry>
1016 1017 1018 1019 1020
       <entry><literal>ascii('x')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>120</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1021
       <entry><literal><function>btrim</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>, <parameter>characters</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
1022 1023
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1024 1025 1026
        Remove the longest string consisting only of characters
        in <parameter>characters</parameter> from the start and end of
        <parameter>string</parameter>.
1027
       </entry>
1028
       <entry><literal>btrim('xyxtrimyyx', 'xy')</literal></entry>
1029 1030 1031 1032
       <entry><literal>trim</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1033
       <entry><literal><function>chr</function>(<type>integer</type>)</literal></entry>
1034
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
1035
       <entry>Character with the given <acronym>ASCII</acronym> code</entry>
1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041
       <entry><literal>chr(65)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>A</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry>
1042
        <literal><function>convert</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>
1043 1044
        <type>text</type>,
        <optional><parameter>src_encoding</parameter> <type>name</type>,</optional>
1045
        <parameter>dest_encoding</parameter> <type>name</type>)</literal>
1046 1047 1048
       </entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1049
        Convert string to <parameter>dest_encoding</parameter>.
1050 1051 1052 1053 1054
        The original encoding is specified by
        <parameter>src_encoding</parameter>.  If
        <parameter>src_encoding</parameter> is omitted, database
        encoding is assumed.
       </entry>
1055
       <entry><literal>convert( 'text_in_unicode', 'UNICODE', 'LATIN1')</literal></entry>
1056
       <entry><literal>text_in_unicode</literal> represented in ISO 8859-1 encoding</entry>
1057 1058 1059 1060
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry>
1061 1062
        <literal><function>decode</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>,
        <parameter>type</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal>
1063 1064 1065
       </entry>
       <entry><type>bytea</type></entry>
       <entry>
1066
        Decode binary data from <parameter>string</parameter> previously 
1067
        encoded with <function>encode</>.  Parameter type is same as in <function>encode</>.
1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>decode('MTIzAAE=', 'base64')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>123\000\001</literal></entry>
      </row>       

      <row>
       <entry>
1075 1076
        <literal><function>encode</function>(<parameter>data</parameter> <type>bytea</type>,
        <parameter>type</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal>
1077 1078 1079
       </entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1080
        Encode binary data to <acronym>ASCII</acronym>-only representation.  Supported
1081
        types are: <literal>base64</>, <literal>hex</>, <literal>escape</>.
1082
       </entry>
1083
       <entry><literal>encode( '123\\000\\001', 'base64')</literal></entry>
1084 1085 1086 1087
       <entry><literal>MTIzAAE=</literal></entry>
      </row>       

      <row>
1088
       <entry><literal><function>initcap</function>(<type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
1089
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095
       <entry>
        Convert the first letter of each word to uppercase and the
        rest to lowercase. Words are sequences of alphanumeric
        characters separated by non-alphanumeric characters.
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>initcap('hi THOMAS')</literal></entry>
1096 1097 1098 1099
       <entry><literal>Hi Thomas</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1100
       <entry><literal><function>length</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
1101 1102
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
       <entry>
1103
        Number of characters in <parameter>string</parameter>.
1104
        <indexterm>
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         <primary>character string</primary>
1106 1107 1108 1109
         <secondary>length</secondary>
        </indexterm>
        <indexterm>
         <primary>length</primary>
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1110
         <secondary sortas="character string">of a character string</secondary>
1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119
         <see>character strings, length</see>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>length('jose')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>4</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry>
1120
        <literal><function>lpad</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>,
1121
        <parameter>length</parameter> <type>integer</type>
1122
        <optional>, <parameter>fill</parameter> <type>text</type></optional>)</literal>
1123
       </entry>
1124
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
1125
       <entry>
1126
        Fill up the <parameter>string</parameter> to length
1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137
        <parameter>length</parameter> by prepending the characters
        <parameter>fill</parameter> (a space by default).  If the
        <parameter>string</parameter> is already longer than
        <parameter>length</parameter> then it is truncated (on the
        right).
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>lpad('hi', 5, 'xy')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>xyxhi</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1138 1139 1140
       <entry><literal><function>ltrim</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>
        <optional>, <parameter>characters</parameter> <type>text</type></optional>)</literal>
       </entry>
1141 1142
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1143
        Remove the longest string containing only characters from
1144
        <parameter>characters</parameter> (a space by default) from the start of
1145
        <parameter>string</parameter>.
1146
       </entry>
1147
       <entry><literal>ltrim('zzzytrim', 'xyz')</literal></entry>
1148 1149 1150
       <entry><literal>trim</literal></entry>
      </row>

1151
      <row>
1152
       <entry><literal><function>md5</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
1153 1154
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1155 1156
        Calculates the MD5 hash of <parameter>string</parameter>,
        returning the result in hexadecimal.
1157 1158
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>md5('abc')</literal></entry>
1159
       <entry><literal>900150983cd24fb0 d6963f7d28e17f72</literal></entry>
1160 1161
      </row>

1162
      <row>
1163
       <entry><literal><function>pg_client_encoding</function>()</literal></entry>
1164 1165
       <entry><type>name</type></entry>
       <entry>
1166
        Current client encoding name
1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>pg_client_encoding()</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SQL_ASCII</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
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1173
       <entry><literal><function>quote_ident</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> text)</literal><indexterm><primary>quote_ident</></></entry>
1174 1175
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1176
        Return the given string suitably quoted to be used as an identifier
1177
	in an <acronym>SQL</acronym> statement string.
1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186
	Quotes are added only if necessary (i.e., if the string contains
	non-identifier characters or would be case-folded).
	Embedded quotes are properly doubled.
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>quote_ident('Foo')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>"Foo"</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
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Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1187
       <entry><literal><function>quote_literal</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> text)</literal><indexterm><primary>quote_literal</></></entry>
1188 1189
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1190 1191
        Return the given string suitably quoted to be used as a string literal
	in an <acronym>SQL</acronym> statement string.
1192 1193
	Embedded quotes and backslashes are properly doubled.
       </entry>
1194
       <entry><literal>quote_literal( 'O\'Reilly')</literal></entry>
1195 1196 1197 1198
       <entry><literal>'O''Reilly'</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1199
       <entry><literal><function>repeat</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>, <parameter>number</parameter> <type>integer</type>)</literal></entry>
1200
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
1201 1202
       <entry>Repeat <parameter>string</parameter> the specified
       <parameter>number</parameter> of times</entry>
1203 1204 1205 1206 1207
       <entry><literal>repeat('Pg', 4)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>PgPgPgPg</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1208
       <entry><literal><function>replace</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>,
1209
       <parameter>from</parameter> <type>text</type>,
1210
       <parameter>to</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
1211 1212
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>Replace all occurrences in <parameter>string</parameter> of substring
1213
        <parameter>from</parameter> with substring <parameter>to</parameter>.
1214
       </entry>
1215
       <entry><literal>replace( 'abcdefabcdef', 'cd', 'XX')</literal></entry>
1216 1217 1218 1219 1220
       <entry><literal>abXXefabXXef</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry>
1221
        <literal><function>rpad</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>,
1222
        <parameter>length</parameter> <type>integer</type>
1223
        <optional>, <parameter>fill</parameter> <type>text</type></optional>)</literal>
1224 1225 1226
       </entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1227
        Fill up the <parameter>string</parameter> to length
1228 1229 1230 1231 1232 1233 1234 1235 1236 1237
        <parameter>length</parameter> by appending the characters
        <parameter>fill</parameter> (a space by default).  If the
        <parameter>string</parameter> is already longer than
        <parameter>length</parameter> then it is truncated.
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>rpad('hi', 5, 'xy')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>hixyx</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1238 1239 1240
       <entry><literal><function>rtrim</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>
        <optional>, <parameter>characters</parameter> <type>text</type></optional>)</literal>
       </entry>
1241 1242
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1243
        Remove the longest string containing only characters from
1244
        <parameter>characters</parameter> (a space by default) from the end of
1245
        <parameter>string</parameter>.
1246
       </entry>
1247
       <entry><literal>rtrim('trimxxxx', 'x')</literal></entry>
1248 1249 1250 1251
       <entry><literal>trim</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1252
       <entry><literal><function>split_part</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>,
1253
       <parameter>delimiter</parameter> <type>text</type>,
1254
       <parameter>field</parameter> <type>integer</type>)</literal></entry>
1255 1256
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>Split <parameter>string</parameter> on <parameter>delimiter</parameter>
1257
        and return the given field (counting from one)
1258
       </entry>
1259
       <entry><literal>split_part( 'abc~@~def~@~ghi', '~@~', 2)</literal></entry>
1260 1261 1262 1263
       <entry><literal>def</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1264
       <entry><literal><function>strpos</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>, <parameter>substring</parameter>)</literal></entry>
1265 1266
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1267
        Location of specified substring (same as
1268 1269 1270 1271
        <literal>position(<parameter>substring</parameter> in
         <parameter>string</parameter>)</literal>, but note the reversed
        argument order)
       </entry>
1272
       <entry><literal>strpos('high', 'ig')</literal></entry>
1273 1274 1275 1276
       <entry><literal>2</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1277
       <entry><literal><function>substr</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>, <parameter>from</parameter> <optional>, <parameter>count</parameter></optional>)</literal></entry>
1278 1279
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
1280
        Extract substring (same as
1281 1282 1283 1284 1285 1286 1287
        <literal>substring(<parameter>string</parameter> from <parameter>from</parameter> for <parameter>count</parameter>)</literal>)
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>substr('alphabet', 3, 2)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ph</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1288 1289
       <entry><literal><function>to_ascii</function>(<type>text</type>
        <optional>, <parameter>encoding</parameter></optional>)</literal></entry>
1290
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
1291 1292

       <entry>
N
Neil Conway 已提交
1293
       Convert <parameter>text</parameter> to <acronym>ASCII</acronym> from another encoding
1294 1295 1296 1297 1298 1299 1300 1301
       <footnote>
        <para>
         The <function>to_ascii</function> function supports conversion from
         <literal>LATIN1</>, <literal>LATIN2</>, and <literal>WIN1250</> only.
        </para>
       </footnote>
       </entry>

1302 1303 1304 1305 1306
       <entry><literal>to_ascii('Karel')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>Karel</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
1307 1308
       <entry><literal><function>to_hex</function>(<parameter>number</parameter> <type>integer</type>
       or <type>bigint</type>)</literal></entry>
1309 1310
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>Convert <parameter>number</parameter> to its equivalent hexadecimal
1311
        representation
1312
       </entry>
1313 1314
       <entry><literal>to_hex(2147483647)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>7fffffff</literal></entry>
1315 1316 1317 1318
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry>
1319
        <literal><function>translate</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>
1320 1321
        <type>text</type>,
        <parameter>from</parameter> <type>text</type>,
1322
        <parameter>to</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal>
1323 1324 1325 1326 1327 1328 1329 1330 1331 1332 1333 1334 1335 1336 1337 1338 1339
       </entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>
        Any character in <parameter>string</parameter> that matches a
        character in the <parameter>from</parameter> set is replaced by
        the corresponding character in the <parameter>to</parameter>
        set.
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>translate('12345', '14', 'ax')</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>a23x5</literal></entry>
      </row>       
      
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>


T
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1340
   <table id="conversion-names">
1341
    <title>Built-in Conversions</title>
T
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1342 1343 1344
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row>
1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 1356 1357 1358
       <entry>Conversion Name
        <footnote>
         <para>
          The conversion names follow a standard naming scheme: The
          official name of the source encoding with all
          non-alphanumeric characters replaced by underscores followed
          by <literal>_to_</literal> followed by the equally processed
          destination encoding name. Therefore the names might deviate
          from the customary encoding names.
         </para>
        </footnote>
       </entry>
       <entry>Source Encoding</entry>
       <entry>Destination Encoding</entry>
T
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1359 1360
      </row>
     </thead>
1361

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1362 1363
     <tbody>
      <row>
P
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1364 1365 1366
       <entry><literal>ascii_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SQL_ASCII</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1367 1368 1369
      </row>

      <row>
P
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1370 1371 1372
       <entry><literal>ascii_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SQL_ASCII</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1373 1374 1375
      </row>

      <row>
P
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1376 1377 1378
       <entry><literal>big5_to_euc_tw</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>BIG5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_TW</literal></entry>
T
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1379 1380 1381
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1382 1383 1384
       <entry><literal>big5_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>BIG5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1385 1386 1387
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1388 1389 1390
       <entry><literal>big5_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>BIG5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1391 1392 1393
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1394 1395 1396
       <entry><literal>euc_cn_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_CN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1397 1398 1399
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1400 1401 1402
       <entry><literal>euc_cn_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_CN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1403 1404 1405
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1406 1407 1408
       <entry><literal>euc_jp_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_JP</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1409 1410 1411
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1412 1413 1414
       <entry><literal>euc_jp_to_sjis</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_JP</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SJIS</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1415 1416 1417
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1418 1419 1420
       <entry><literal>euc_jp_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_JP</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1421 1422 1423
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1424 1425 1426
       <entry><literal>euc_kr_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_KR</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1427 1428 1429
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1430 1431 1432
       <entry><literal>euc_kr_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_KR</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1433 1434 1435
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1436 1437 1438
       <entry><literal>euc_tw_to_big5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_TW</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>BIG5</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1439 1440 1441
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1442 1443 1444
       <entry><literal>euc_tw_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_TW</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1445 1446 1447
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1448 1449 1450
       <entry><literal>euc_tw_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_TW</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1451 1452 1453
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1454 1455 1456
       <entry><literal>gb18030_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>GB18030</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1457 1458 1459
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1460 1461 1462
       <entry><literal>gbk_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>GBK</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1463 1464 1465
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1466 1467 1468
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_10_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN6</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1469 1470 1471
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1472 1473 1474
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_13_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN7</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1475 1476 1477
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1478 1479 1480
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_14_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1481 1482 1483
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1484 1485 1486
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_15_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN9</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1487 1488 1489
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1490 1491 1492
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_16_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN10</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1493 1494 1495
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1496 1497 1498
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_1_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN1</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1499 1500 1501
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1502 1503 1504
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_1_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN1</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1505 1506 1507
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1508 1509 1510
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_2_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1511 1512 1513
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1514 1515 1516
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_2_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1517 1518 1519
      </row>

      <row>
1520
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_2_to_windows_1250</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1521 1522
       <entry><literal>LATIN2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN1250</literal></entry>
1523 1524 1525
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1526 1527 1528
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_3_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1529 1530 1531
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1532 1533 1534
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_3_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1535 1536 1537
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1538 1539 1540
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_4_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN4</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1541 1542 1543
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1544 1545 1546
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_4_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN4</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1547 1548 1549
      </row>

      <row>
1550
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_5_to_koi8_r</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1551 1552
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
1553 1554 1555
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1556 1557 1558
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_5_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1559 1560 1561
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1562 1563 1564
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_5_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1565 1566 1567
      </row>

      <row>
1568
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_5_to_windows_1251</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1569 1570
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
1571 1572 1573
      </row>

      <row>
1574
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_5_to_windows_866</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1575 1576
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
1577 1578 1579
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1580 1581 1582
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_6_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_6</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1583 1584 1585
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1586 1587 1588
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_7_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_7</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1589 1590 1591
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1592 1593 1594
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_8_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1595 1596 1597
      </row>

      <row>
P
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1598 1599 1600
       <entry><literal>iso_8859_9_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
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1601 1602 1603
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1604 1605 1606
       <entry><literal>johab_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>JOHAB</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1607 1608
      </row>

1609
      <row>
1610
       <entry><literal>koi8_r_to_iso_8859_5</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1611 1612
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
1613 1614 1615
      </row>

      <row>
1616
       <entry><literal>koi8_r_to_mic</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1617 1618
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1619 1620 1621
      </row>

      <row>
1622
       <entry><literal>koi8_r_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1623 1624
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
1625 1626 1627
      </row>

      <row>
1628
       <entry><literal>koi8_r_to_windows_1251</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1629 1630
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
1631 1632 1633
      </row>

      <row>
1634
       <entry><literal>koi8_r_to_windows_866</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1635 1636
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
1637 1638 1639
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1640 1641 1642
       <entry><literal>mic_to_ascii</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SQL_ASCII</literal></entry>
1643 1644
      </row>

T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1645
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1646 1647 1648
       <entry><literal>mic_to_big5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>BIG5</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1649 1650
      </row>

1651
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1652 1653 1654
       <entry><literal>mic_to_euc_cn</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_CN</literal></entry>
1655 1656
      </row>

T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1657
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1658 1659 1660
       <entry><literal>mic_to_euc_jp</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_JP</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1661 1662
      </row>

1663
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1664 1665 1666
       <entry><literal>mic_to_euc_kr</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_KR</literal></entry>
1667 1668
      </row>

T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1669
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1670 1671 1672
       <entry><literal>mic_to_euc_tw</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_TW</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1673 1674
      </row>

1675
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1676 1677 1678
       <entry><literal>mic_to_iso_8859_1</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN1</literal></entry>
1679 1680 1681
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1682 1683 1684
       <entry><literal>mic_to_iso_8859_2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN2</literal></entry>
1685 1686 1687
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1688 1689 1690
       <entry><literal>mic_to_iso_8859_3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN3</literal></entry>
1691 1692 1693
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1694 1695 1696
       <entry><literal>mic_to_iso_8859_4</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN4</literal></entry>
1697 1698 1699
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1700 1701 1702
       <entry><literal>mic_to_iso_8859_5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
1703 1704 1705
      </row>

      <row>
1706
       <entry><literal>mic_to_koi8_r</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1707 1708
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
1709 1710
      </row>

T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1711
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1712 1713 1714
       <entry><literal>mic_to_sjis</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SJIS</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1715 1716
      </row>

1717
      <row>
1718
       <entry><literal>mic_to_windows_1250</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1719 1720
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN1250</literal></entry>
1721 1722 1723
      </row>

      <row>
1724
       <entry><literal>mic_to_windows_1251</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1725 1726
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
1727 1728 1729
      </row>

      <row>
1730
       <entry><literal>mic_to_windows_866</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1731 1732
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
1733 1734
      </row>

T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1735
      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1736 1737 1738
       <entry><literal>sjis_to_euc_jp</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SJIS</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_JP</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1739 1740 1741
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1742 1743 1744
       <entry><literal>sjis_to_mic</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SJIS</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1745 1746 1747
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1748 1749 1750
       <entry><literal>sjis_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SJIS</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1751 1752 1753
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1754 1755 1756
       <entry><literal>tcvn_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>TCVN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1757 1758 1759
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1760 1761 1762
       <entry><literal>uhc_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UHC</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1763 1764 1765
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1766 1767 1768
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_ascii</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SQL_ASCII</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1769 1770 1771
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1772 1773 1774
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_big5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>BIG5</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1775 1776 1777
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1778 1779 1780
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_euc_cn</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_CN</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1781 1782 1783
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1784 1785 1786
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_euc_jp</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_JP</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1787 1788 1789
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1790 1791 1792
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_euc_kr</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_KR</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1793 1794 1795
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1796 1797 1798
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_euc_tw</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>EUC_TW</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1799 1800 1801
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1802 1803 1804
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_gb18030</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>GB18030</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1805 1806 1807
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1808 1809 1810
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_gbk</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>GBK</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1811 1812 1813
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1814 1815 1816
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_1</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN1</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1817 1818 1819
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1820 1821 1822
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_10</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN6</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1823 1824 1825
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1826 1827 1828
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_13</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN7</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1829 1830 1831
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1832 1833 1834
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_14</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN8</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1835 1836 1837
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1838 1839 1840
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_15</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN9</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1841 1842 1843
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1844 1845 1846
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_16</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN10</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1847 1848 1849
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1850 1851 1852
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN2</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1853 1854 1855
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1856 1857 1858
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN3</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1859 1860 1861
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1862 1863 1864
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_4</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN4</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1865 1866 1867
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1868 1869 1870
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_5</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1871 1872 1873
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1874 1875 1876
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_6</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_6</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1877 1878 1879
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1880 1881 1882
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_7</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_7</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1883 1884 1885
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1886 1887 1888
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_8</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_8</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1889 1890 1891
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1892 1893 1894
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_iso_8859_9</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN5</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1895 1896 1897
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1898 1899 1900
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_johab</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>JOHAB</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1901 1902 1903
      </row>

      <row>
1904
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_koi8_r</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1905 1906
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
1907 1908 1909
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1910 1911 1912
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_sjis</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>SJIS</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1913 1914 1915
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1916 1917 1918
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_tcvn</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>TCVN</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1919 1920 1921
      </row>

      <row>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1922 1923 1924
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_uhc</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UHC</literal></entry>
T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
1925 1926
      </row>

1927
      <row>
1928
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_windows_1250</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1929 1930
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN1250</literal></entry>
1931 1932 1933
      </row>

      <row>
1934
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_windows_1251</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1935 1936
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
1937 1938 1939
      </row>

      <row>
1940
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_windows_1256</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1941 1942
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN1256</literal></entry>
1943 1944 1945
      </row>

      <row>
1946
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_windows_866</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
1947 1948
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
1949 1950 1951
      </row>

      <row>
1952
       <entry><literal>utf_8_to_windows_874</literal></entry>
1953 1954
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN874</literal></entry>
1955
      </row>
1956

1957
      <row>
1958
       <entry><literal>windows_1250_to_iso_8859_2</literal></entry>
1959 1960
       <entry><literal>WIN1250</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>LATIN2</literal></entry>
1961
      </row>
1962

1963
      <row>
1964
       <entry><literal>windows_1250_to_mic</literal></entry>
1965 1966
       <entry><literal>WIN1250</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1967 1968 1969
      </row>

      <row>
1970
       <entry><literal>windows_1250_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
1971 1972
       <entry><literal>WIN1250</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
1973 1974
      </row>

1975
      <row>
1976
       <entry><literal>windows_1251_to_iso_8859_5</literal></entry>
1977 1978
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
1979
      </row>
1980

1981
      <row>
1982
       <entry><literal>windows_1251_to_koi8_r</literal></entry>
1983 1984
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
1985 1986
      </row>

1987
      <row>
1988
       <entry><literal>windows_1251_to_mic</literal></entry>
1989 1990
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
1991
      </row>
1992

1993
      <row>
1994
       <entry><literal>windows_1251_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
1995 1996
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
1997
      </row>
1998

1999
      <row>
2000
       <entry><literal>windows_1251_to_windows_866</literal></entry>
2001 2002
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
2003 2004
      </row>

2005
      <row>
2006
       <entry><literal>windows_1256_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
2007 2008
       <entry><literal>WIN1256</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
2009
      </row>
2010

2011
      <row>
2012
       <entry><literal>windows_866_to_iso_8859_5</literal></entry>
2013 2014
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>ISO_8859_5</literal></entry>
2015
      </row>
2016

2017
      <row>
2018
       <entry><literal>windows_866_to_koi8_r</literal></entry>
2019 2020
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>KOI8</literal></entry>
2021
      </row>
2022

2023
      <row>
2024
       <entry><literal>windows_866_to_mic</literal></entry>
2025 2026
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>MULE_INTERNAL</literal></entry>
2027 2028
      </row>

2029
      <row>
2030
       <entry><literal>windows_866_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
2031 2032 2033 2034 2035
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
2036
       <entry><literal>windows_866_to_windows_1251</literal></entry>
2037 2038 2039 2040 2041
       <entry><literal>ALT</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>WIN</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
2042
       <entry><literal>windows_874_to_utf_8</literal></entry>
2043 2044 2045 2046
       <entry><literal>WIN874</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>UNICODE</literal></entry>
      </row>

2047 2048 2049
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
2050

2051
  </sect1>
2052

2053

2054 2055
  <sect1 id="functions-binarystring">
   <title>Binary String Functions and Operators</title>
2056

P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
2057 2058 2059 2060 2061
   <indexterm zone="functions-binarystring">
    <primary>binary data</primary>
    <secondary>functions</secondary>
   </indexterm>

2062 2063
   <para>
    This section describes functions and operators for examining and
2064
    manipulating values of type <type>bytea</type>.
2065
   </para>
2066

2067 2068 2069
   <para>
    <acronym>SQL</acronym> defines some string functions with a
    special syntax where 
2070
    certain key words rather than commas are used to separate the
2071 2072 2073 2074 2075 2076
    arguments.  Details are in
    <xref linkend="functions-binarystring-sql">.
    Some functions are also implemented using the regular syntax for
    function invocation.
    (See <xref linkend="functions-binarystring-other">.)
   </para>
2077

2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089
   <table id="functions-binarystring-sql">
    <title><acronym>SQL</acronym> Binary String Functions and Operators</title>
    <tgroup cols="5">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Function</entry>
       <entry>Return Type</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
       <entry>Example</entry>
       <entry>Result</entry>  
      </row>
     </thead>
2090

2091 2092
     <tbody>
      <row>
2093 2094
       <entry><literal><parameter>string</parameter> <literal>||</literal>
        <parameter>string</parameter></literal></entry>
2095 2096
       <entry> <type>bytea</type> </entry>
       <entry>
2097
        String concatenation
2098
        <indexterm>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
2099
         <primary>binary string</primary>
2100 2101 2102
         <secondary>concatenation</secondary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
2103 2104
       <entry><literal>'\\\\Post'::bytea || '\\047gres\\000'::bytea</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>\\Post'gres\000</literal></entry>
2105
      </row>
2106

2107
      <row>
2108
       <entry><literal><function>octet_length</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
2109
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
2110
       <entry>Number of bytes in binary string</entry>
2111
       <entry><literal>octet_length( 'jo\\000se'::bytea)</literal></entry>
2112 2113
       <entry><literal>5</literal></entry>
      </row>
2114

2115
      <row>
2116
       <entry><literal><function>position</function>(<parameter>substring</parameter> in <parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
2117
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
2118
       <entry>Location of specified substring</entry>
2119 2120 2121
      <entry><literal>position('\\000om'::bytea in 'Th\\000omas'::bytea)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>3</literal></entry>
      </row>
2122

2123
      <row>
2124
       <entry><literal><function>substring</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <optional>from <type>integer</type></optional> <optional>for <type>integer</type></optional>)</literal></entry>
2125 2126
       <entry><type>bytea</type></entry>
       <entry>
2127
        Extract substring
2128 2129 2130 2131 2132 2133 2134
        <indexterm>
         <primary>substring</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>substring('Th\\000omas'::bytea from 2 for 3)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>h\000o</literal></entry>
      </row>
2135

2136 2137
      <row>
       <entry>
2138 2139 2140
        <literal><function>trim</function>(<optional>both</optional>
        <parameter>bytes</parameter> from
        <parameter>string</parameter>)</literal>
2141 2142 2143
       </entry>
       <entry><type>bytea</type></entry>
       <entry>
2144 2145 2146
        Remove the longest string containing only the bytes in
        <parameter>bytes</parameter> from the start
        and end of <parameter>string</parameter>
2147 2148 2149 2150
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>trim('\\000'::bytea from '\\000Tom\\000'::bytea)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>Tom</literal></entry>
      </row>
2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165

      <row>
       <entry><function>get_byte</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>, <parameter>offset</parameter>)</entry>
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
       <entry>
        Extract byte from string.
        <indexterm>
         <primary>get_byte</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>get_byte('Th\\000omas'::bytea, 4)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>109</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
2166 2167
       <entry><function>set_byte</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>,
       <parameter>offset</parameter>, <parameter>newvalue</>)</entry>
2168 2169 2170 2171 2172 2173 2174 2175 2176 2177 2178 2179 2180 2181 2182 2183 2184 2185 2186 2187 2188 2189 2190 2191 2192
       <entry><type>bytea</type></entry>
       <entry>
        Set byte in string.
        <indexterm>
         <primary>set_byte</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>set_byte('Th\\000omas'::bytea, 4, 64)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>Th\000o@as</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry><function>get_bit</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>, <parameter>offset</parameter>)</entry>
       <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
       <entry>
        Extract bit from string.
        <indexterm>
         <primary>get_bit</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>get_bit('Th\\000omas'::bytea, 45)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>1</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
2193 2194
       <entry><function>set_bit</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>,
       <parameter>offset</parameter>, <parameter>newvalue</>)</entry>
2195 2196 2197 2198 2199 2200 2201 2202 2203 2204
       <entry><type>bytea</type></entry>
       <entry>
        Set bit in string.
        <indexterm>
         <primary>set_bit</primary>
        </indexterm>
       </entry>
       <entry><literal>set_bit('Th\\000omas'::bytea, 45, 0)</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>Th\000omAs</literal></entry>
      </row>
2205 2206 2207
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
2208

2209
   <para>
2210 2211 2212 2213 2214
    Additional binary string manipulation functions are available and
    are listed in <xref linkend="functions-binarystring-other">.  Some
    of them are used internally to implement the
    <acronym>SQL</acronym>-standard string functions listed in <xref
    linkend="functions-binarystring-sql">.
2215
   </para>
2216

2217 2218 2219 2220 2221 2222 2223 2224 2225 2226 2227 2228
   <table id="functions-binarystring-other">
    <title>Other Binary String Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="5">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Function</entry>
       <entry>Return Type</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
       <entry>Example</entry>
       <entry>Result</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>
2229

2230 2231
     <tbody>
      <row>
2232
       <entry><literal><function>btrim</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>
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        <type>bytea</type>, <parameter>bytes</parameter> <type>bytea</type>)</literal></entry>
2234 2235
       <entry><type>bytea</type></entry>
       <entry>
2236 2237
        Remove the longest string consisting only of bytes
        in <parameter>bytes</parameter> from the start and end of
2238
        <parameter>string</parameter>.
2239
      </entry>
2240
      <entry><literal>btrim('\\000trim\\000'::bytea, '\\000'::bytea)</literal></entry>
2241 2242 2243 2244
      <entry><literal>trim</literal></entry>
     </row>

     <row>
2245
      <entry><literal><function>length</function>(<parameter>string</parameter>)</literal></entry>
2246 2247
      <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
      <entry>
2248
       Length of binary string
2249
       <indexterm>
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        <primary>binary string</primary>
2251 2252 2253 2254
	<secondary>length</secondary>
       </indexterm>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>length</primary>
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	<secondary sortas="binary string">of a binary string</secondary>
2256 2257 2258
	<see>binary strings, length</see>
       </indexterm>
      </entry>
2259 2260
      <entry><literal>length('jo\\000se'::bytea)</literal></entry>
      <entry><literal>5</literal></entry>
2261 2262 2263 2264
     </row>

     <row>
      <entry>
2265 2266
       <literal><function>decode</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>text</type>,
              <parameter>type</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal>
2267
      </entry>
2268
      <entry><type>bytea</type></entry>
2269
      <entry>
2270 2271
       Decode binary string from <parameter>string</parameter> previously 
       encoded with <literal>encode</>.  Parameter type is same as in <literal>encode</>.
2272
      </entry>
2273
      <entry><literal>decode('123\\000456', 'escape')</literal></entry>
2274 2275 2276 2277 2278
      <entry><literal>123\000456</literal></entry>
     </row>       

     <row>
      <entry>
2279 2280
       <literal><function>encode</function>(<parameter>string</parameter> <type>bytea</type>,
              <parameter>type</parameter> <type>text</type>)</literal>
2281
      </entry>
2282
      <entry><type>text</type></entry>
2283
      <entry>
2284 2285
       Encode binary string to <acronym>ASCII</acronym>-only representation.  Supported
       types are: <literal>base64</>, <literal>hex</>, <literal>escape</>.
2286
      </entry>
2287
      <entry><literal>encode('123\\000456'::bytea, 'escape')</literal></entry>
2288 2289 2290 2291 2292 2293 2294 2295 2296 2297
      <entry><literal>123\000456</literal></entry>
     </row>       

    </tbody>
   </tgroup>
  </table>

 </sect1>


2298 2299 2300 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 2351 2352 2353 2354 2355 2356 2357 2358 2359 2360 2361 2362 2363 2364 2365 2366 2367 2368 2369 2370 2371 2372 2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421
  <sect1 id="functions-bitstring">
   <title>Bit String Functions and Operators</title>

   <indexterm zone="functions-bitstring">
    <primary>bit strings</primary>
    <secondary>functions</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <para>
    This section describes functions and operators for examining and
    manipulating bit strings, that is values of the types
    <type>bit</type> and <type>bit varying</type>.  Aside from the
    usual comparison operators, the operators
    shown in <xref linkend="functions-bit-string-op-table"> can be used.
    Bit string operands of <literal>&amp;</literal>, <literal>|</literal>,
    and <literal>#</literal> must be of equal length.  When bit
    shifting, the original length of the string is preserved, as shown
    in the examples.
   </para>

   <table id="functions-bit-string-op-table">
    <title>Bit String Operators</title>

    <tgroup cols="4">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Operator</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
       <entry>Example</entry>
       <entry>Result</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry> <literal>||</literal> </entry>
       <entry>concatenation</entry>
       <entry><literal>B'10001' || B'011'</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>10001011</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry> <literal>&amp;</literal> </entry>
       <entry>bitwise AND</entry>
       <entry><literal>B'10001' &amp; B'01101'</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>00001</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry> <literal>|</literal> </entry>
       <entry>bitwise OR</entry>
       <entry><literal>B'10001' | B'01101'</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>11101</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry> <literal>#</literal> </entry>
       <entry>bitwise XOR</entry>
       <entry><literal>B'10001' # B'01101'</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>11100</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry> <literal>~</literal> </entry>
       <entry>bitwise NOT</entry>
       <entry><literal>~ B'10001'</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>01110</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry> <literal>&lt;&lt;</literal> </entry>
       <entry>bitwise shift left</entry>
       <entry><literal>B'10001' &lt;&lt; 3</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>01000</literal></entry>
      </row>

      <row>
       <entry> <literal>&gt;&gt;</literal> </entry>
       <entry>bitwise shift right</entry>
       <entry><literal>B'10001' &gt;&gt; 2</literal></entry>
       <entry><literal>00100</literal></entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>

   <para>
    The following <acronym>SQL</acronym>-standard functions work on bit
    strings as well as character strings:
    <literal><function>length</function></literal>,
    <literal><function>bit_length</function></literal>,
    <literal><function>octet_length</function></literal>,
    <literal><function>position</function></literal>,
    <literal><function>substring</function></literal>.
   </para>

   <para>
    In addition, it is possible to cast integral values to and from type
    <type>bit</>.
    Some examples:
<programlisting>
44::bit(10)                    <lineannotation>0000101100</lineannotation>
44::bit(3)                     <lineannotation>100</lineannotation>
cast(-44 as bit(12))           <lineannotation>111111010100</lineannotation>
'1110'::bit(4)::integer        <lineannotation>14</lineannotation>
</programlisting>
    Note that casting to just <quote>bit</> means casting to
    <literal>bit(1)</>, and so it will deliver only the least significant
    bit of the integer.
   </para>

    <note>
     <para>
      Prior to <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 7.5, casting an
      integer to <type>bit(n)</> would copy the leftmost <literal>n</>
      bits of the integer, whereas now it copies the rightmost <literal>n</>
      bits.  Also, casting an integer to a bit string width wider than
      the integer itself will sign-extend on the left.
     </para>
    </note>

  </sect1>


2422 2423 2424
 <sect1 id="functions-matching">
  <title>Pattern Matching</title>

2425 2426 2427 2428
  <indexterm zone="functions-matching">
   <primary>pattern matching</primary>
  </indexterm>

2429
   <para>
2430
    There are three separate approaches to pattern matching provided by
2431 2432
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>:  the traditional
    <acronym>SQL</acronym> 
2433
    <function>LIKE</function> operator, the more recent
2434
    <acronym>SQL99</acronym> 
2435
    <function>SIMILAR TO</function> operator, and
2436 2437
    <acronym>POSIX</acronym>-style regular expressions.
    Additionally, a pattern matching function,
2438
    <function>substring</function>, is available, using either
2439
    <acronym>SQL99</acronym>-style or POSIX-style regular expressions.
2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447
   </para>

   <tip>
    <para>
     If you have pattern matching needs that go beyond this,
     consider writing a user-defined function in Perl or Tcl.
    </para>
   </tip>
2448

2449
  <sect2 id="functions-like">
2450
   <title><function>LIKE</function></title>
2451

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2452 2453
   <indexterm zone="functions-like">
    <primary>LIKE</primary>
2454 2455
   </indexterm>

2456
<synopsis>
2457 2458
<replaceable>string</replaceable> LIKE <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> <optional>ESCAPE <replaceable>escape-character</replaceable></optional>
<replaceable>string</replaceable> NOT LIKE <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> <optional>ESCAPE <replaceable>escape-character</replaceable></optional>
2459
</synopsis>
2460

2461 2462 2463 2464 2465 2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471
    <para>
     Every <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> defines a set of strings.
     The <function>LIKE</function> expression returns true if the
     <replaceable>string</replaceable> is contained in the set of
     strings represented by <replaceable>pattern</replaceable>.  (As
     expected, the <function>NOT LIKE</function> expression returns
     false if <function>LIKE</function> returns true, and vice versa.
     An equivalent expression is
     <literal>NOT (<replaceable>string</replaceable> LIKE
      <replaceable>pattern</replaceable>)</literal>.)
    </para>
2472 2473

    <para>
2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 2479 2480 2481 2482
     If <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> does not contain percent
     signs or underscore, then the pattern only represents the string
     itself; in that case <function>LIKE</function> acts like the
     equals operator.  An underscore (<literal>_</literal>) in
     <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> stands for (matches) any single
     character; a percent sign (<literal>%</literal>) matches any string
     of zero or more characters.
    </para>

2483 2484 2485
   <para>
    Some examples:
<programlisting>
2486 2487 2488 2489
'abc' LIKE 'abc'    <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' LIKE 'a%'     <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' LIKE '_b_'    <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' LIKE 'c'      <lineannotation>false</lineannotation>
2490 2491 2492
</programlisting>
   </para>
   
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   <para>
2494
    <function>LIKE</function> pattern matches always cover the entire
2495
    string.  To match a pattern anywhere within a string, the
2496
    pattern must therefore start and end with a percent sign.
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   </para>
2498 2499

   <para>
2500 2501 2502 2503
    To match a literal underscore or percent sign without matching
    other characters, the respective character in
    <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> must be 
    preceded by the escape character.  The default escape
2504
    character is the backslash but a different one may be selected by
2505 2506 2507 2508 2509 2510 2511
    using the <literal>ESCAPE</literal> clause.  To match the escape
    character itself, write two escape characters.
   </para>

   <para>
    Note that the backslash already has a special meaning in string
    literals, so to write a pattern constant that contains a backslash
2512
    you must write two backslashes in an SQL statement.  Thus, writing a pattern
2513
    that actually matches a literal backslash means writing four backslashes
2514 2515
    in the statement.  You can avoid this by selecting a different escape
    character with <literal>ESCAPE</literal>; then a backslash is not special
2516
    to <function>LIKE</function> anymore. (But it is still special to the string
2517 2518 2519 2520 2521
    literal parser, so you still need two of them.)
   </para>

   <para>
    It's also possible to select no escape character by writing
2522
    <literal>ESCAPE ''</literal>.  This effectively disables the
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2523 2524
    escape mechanism, which makes it impossible to turn off the
    special meaning of underscore and percent signs in the pattern.
2525
   </para>
2526 2527

   <para>
2528
    The key word <token>ILIKE</token> can be used instead of
2529
    <token>LIKE</token> to make the match case insensitive according
2530
    to the active locale.  This is not in the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard but is a
2531
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
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2532
   </para>
2533

2534 2535
   <para>
    The operator <literal>~~</literal> is equivalent to
2536 2537 2538
    <function>LIKE</function>, and <literal>~~*</literal> corresponds to
    <function>ILIKE</function>.  There are also
    <literal>!~~</literal> and <literal>!~~*</literal> operators that
2539
    represent <function>NOT LIKE</function> and <function>NOT
2540
    ILIKE</function>, respectively.  All of these operators are
2541
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>-specific.
2542 2543
   </para>
  </sect2>
2544

2545

2546 2547
  <sect2 id="functions-sql99-regexp">
   <title><function>SIMILAR TO</function> and <acronym>SQL99</acronym>
2548
     Regular Expressions</title>
2549

2550
   <indexterm zone="functions-sql99-regexp">
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2551
    <primary>regular expression</primary>
2552
    <!-- <seealso>pattern matching</seealso> breaks index build -->
2553 2554 2555
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
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    <primary>SIMILAR TO</primary>
2557 2558 2559 2560 2561 2562
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>substring</primary>
   </indexterm>

2563
<synopsis>
2564 2565
<replaceable>string</replaceable> SIMILAR TO <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> <optional>ESCAPE <replaceable>escape-character</replaceable></optional>
<replaceable>string</replaceable> NOT SIMILAR TO <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> <optional>ESCAPE <replaceable>escape-character</replaceable></optional>
2566
</synopsis>
2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585

    <para>
     The <function>SIMILAR TO</function> operator returns true or false
     depending on whether its pattern matches the given string.  It is
     much like <function>LIKE</function>, except that it interprets the
     pattern using <acronym>SQL99</acronym>'s definition of a regular
     expression.
     <acronym>SQL99</acronym>'s regular expressions are a curious cross
     between <function>LIKE</function> notation and common regular expression
     notation.
    </para>

    <para>
     Like <function>LIKE</function>, the  <function>SIMILAR TO</function>
     operator succeeds only if its pattern matches the entire string;
     this is unlike common regular expression practice, wherein the pattern
     may match any part of the string.
     Also like
     <function>LIKE</function>, <function>SIMILAR TO</function> uses
2586 2587 2588
     <literal>_</> and <literal>%</> as wildcard characters denoting
     any single character and any string, respectively (these are
     comparable to <literal>.</> and <literal>.*</> in POSIX regular
2589 2590 2591 2592 2593 2594 2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 2602 2603 2604 2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 2626 2627 2628 2629
     expressions).
    </para>

    <para>
     In addition to these facilities borrowed from <function>LIKE</function>,
     <function>SIMILAR TO</function> supports these pattern-matching
     metacharacters borrowed from POSIX regular expressions:

    <itemizedlist>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       <literal>|</literal> denotes alternation (either of two alternatives).
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       <literal>*</literal> denotes repetition of the previous item zero
       or more times.
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       <literal>+</literal> denotes repetition of the previous item one
       or more times.
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       Parentheses <literal>()</literal> may be used to group items into
       a single logical item.
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       A bracket expression <literal>[...]</literal> specifies a character
       class, just as in POSIX regular expressions.
      </para>
     </listitem>
    </itemizedlist>

     Notice that bounded repetition (<literal>?</> and <literal>{...}</>)
2630
     are not provided, though they exist in POSIX.  Also, the dot (<literal>.</>)
2631 2632 2633 2634 2635 2636 2637 2638 2639
     is not a metacharacter.
    </para>

    <para>
     As with <function>LIKE</>, a backslash disables the special meaning
     of any of these metacharacters; or a different escape character can
     be specified with <literal>ESCAPE</>.
    </para>

2640 2641 2642
   <para>
    Some examples:
<programlisting>
2643 2644 2645 2646
'abc' SIMILAR TO 'abc'      <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' SIMILAR TO 'a'        <lineannotation>false</lineannotation>
'abc' SIMILAR TO '%(b|d)%'  <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' SIMILAR TO '(b|c)%'   <lineannotation>false</lineannotation>
2647 2648
</programlisting>
   </para>
2649 2650

    <para>
2651 2652 2653 2654
     The <function>substring</> function with three parameters,
     <function>substring(<parameter>string</parameter> from
     <replaceable>pattern</replaceable> for
     <replaceable>escape-character</replaceable>)</function>, provides
2655 2656 2657 2658
     extraction of a substring that matches a <acronym>SQL99</acronym>
     regular expression pattern.  As with <literal>SIMILAR TO</>, the
     specified pattern must match to the entire data string, else the
     function fails and returns null.  To indicate the part of the
2659 2660
     pattern that should be returned on success, the pattern must contain
     two occurrences of the escape character followed by a double quote
2661 2662
     (<literal>"</>).  The text matching the portion of the pattern
     between these markers is returned.
2663 2664
    </para>

2665 2666 2667
   <para>
    Some examples:
<programlisting>
2668 2669
substring('foobar' from '%#"o_b#"%' for '#')   <lineannotation>oob</lineannotation>
substring('foobar' from '#"o_b#"%' for '#')    <lineannotation>NULL</lineannotation>
2670 2671
</programlisting>
   </para>
2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677
  </sect2>

  <sect2 id="functions-posix-regexp">
   <title><acronym>POSIX</acronym> Regular Expressions</title>

   <indexterm zone="functions-posix-regexp">
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    <primary>regular expression</primary>
2679 2680 2681
    <seealso>pattern matching</seealso>
   </indexterm>

2682 2683 2684 2685 2686 2687
   <para>
    <xref linkend="functions-posix-table"> lists the available
    operators for pattern matching using POSIX regular expressions.
   </para>

   <table id="functions-posix-table">
2688 2689 2690 2691 2692 2693 2694 2695 2696 2697 2698
    <title>Regular Expression Match Operators</title>

    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Operator</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
       <entry>Example</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

2699 2700 2701 2702 2703 2704
      <tbody>
       <row>
        <entry> <literal>~</literal> </entry>
        <entry>Matches regular expression, case sensitive</entry>
        <entry><literal>'thomas' ~ '.*thomas.*'</literal></entry>
       </row>
2705

2706 2707 2708 2709 2710
       <row>
        <entry> <literal>~*</literal> </entry>
        <entry>Matches regular expression, case insensitive</entry>
        <entry><literal>'thomas' ~* '.*Thomas.*'</literal></entry>
       </row>
2711

2712 2713 2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729
       <row>
        <entry> <literal>!~</literal> </entry>
        <entry>Does not match regular expression, case sensitive</entry>
        <entry><literal>'thomas' !~ '.*Thomas.*'</literal></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>!~*</literal> </entry>
        <entry>Does not match regular expression, case insensitive</entry>
        <entry><literal>'thomas' !~* '.*vadim.*'</literal></entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

    <para>
     <acronym>POSIX</acronym> regular expressions provide a more
     powerful means for 
2730 2731
     pattern matching than the <function>LIKE</function> and
     <function>SIMILAR TO</> operators.
2732 2733 2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745 2746 2747 2748 2749 2750
     Many Unix tools such as <command>egrep</command>,
     <command>sed</command>, or <command>awk</command> use a pattern
     matching language that is similar to the one described here.
    </para>

    <para>
     A regular expression is a character sequence that is an
     abbreviated definition of a set of strings (a <firstterm>regular
      set</firstterm>).  A string is said to match a regular expression
     if it is a member of the regular set described by the regular
     expression.  As with <function>LIKE</function>, pattern characters
     match string characters exactly unless they are special characters
     in the regular expression language --- but regular expressions use
     different special characters than <function>LIKE</function> does.
     Unlike <function>LIKE</function> patterns, a
     regular expression is allowed to match anywhere within a string, unless
     the regular expression is explicitly anchored to the beginning or
     end of the string.
    </para>
2751

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   <para>
    Some examples:
<programlisting>
2755 2756 2757 2758
'abc' ~ 'abc'    <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' ~ '^a'     <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' ~ '(b|d)'  <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
'abc' ~ '^(b|c)' <lineannotation>false</lineannotation>
2759 2760
</programlisting>
   </para>
2761 2762

    <para>
2763 2764
     The <function>substring</> function with two parameters,
     <function>substring(<parameter>string</parameter> from
2765 2766
     <replaceable>pattern</replaceable>)</function>, provides extraction of a substring
     that matches a POSIX regular expression pattern.  It returns null if
2767 2768 2769 2770 2771 2772
     there is no match, otherwise the portion of the text that matched the
     pattern.  But if the pattern contains any parentheses, the portion
     of the text that matched the first parenthesized subexpression (the
     one whose left parenthesis comes first) is
     returned.  You can always put parentheses around the whole expression
     if you want to use parentheses within it without triggering this
2773
     exception.  Also see the non-capturing parentheses described below.
2774 2775
    </para>

2776 2777 2778
   <para>
    Some examples:
<programlisting>
2779 2780
substring('foobar' from 'o.b')     <lineannotation>oob</lineannotation>
substring('foobar' from 'o(.)b')   <lineannotation>o</lineannotation>
2781 2782
</programlisting>
   </para>
2783

2784 2785 2786 2787 2788 2789 2790 2791 2792 2793 2794 2795
   <para>
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s regular expressions are implemented
    using a package written by Henry Spencer.  Much of
    the description of regular expressions below is copied verbatim from his
    manual entry.
   </para>

<!-- derived from the re_syntax.n man page -->

   <sect3 id="posix-syntax-details">
    <title>Regular Expression Details</title>

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   <para>
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    Regular expressions (<acronym>RE</acronym>s), as defined in
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    <acronym>POSIX</acronym> 1003.2, come in two forms:
    <firstterm>extended</> <acronym>RE</acronym>s or <acronym>ERE</>s
    (roughly those of <command>egrep</command>), and
    <firstterm>basic</> <acronym>RE</acronym>s or <acronym>BRE</>s
    (roughly those of <command>ed</command>).
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> supports both forms, and
    also implements some extensions
    that are not in the POSIX standard, but have become widely used anyway
    due to their availability in programming languages such as Perl and Tcl.
    <acronym>RE</acronym>s using these non-POSIX extensions are called
    <firstterm>advanced</> <acronym>RE</acronym>s or <acronym>ARE</>s
2809 2810 2811 2812 2813
    in this documentation.  AREs are almost an exact superset of EREs,
    but BREs have several notational incompatibilities (as well as being
    much more limited).
    We first describe the ARE and ERE forms, noting features that apply
    only to AREs, and then describe how BREs differ.
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   </para>
2815

2816 2817
   <note>
    <para>
2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823
     The form of regular expressions accepted by
     <productname>PostgreSQL</> can be chosen by setting the <xref
     linkend="guc-regex-flavor"> run-time parameter.  The usual
     setting is <literal>advanced</>, but one might choose
     <literal>extended</> for maximum backwards compatibility with
     pre-7.4 releases of <productname>PostgreSQL</>.
2824 2825 2826
    </para>
   </note>

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   <para>
2828
    A regular expression is defined as one or more
2829 2830 2831
    <firstterm>branches</firstterm>, separated by
    <literal>|</literal>.  It matches anything that matches one of the
    branches.
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   </para>
2833

2834
   <para>
2835 2836 2837 2838
    A branch is zero or more <firstterm>quantified atoms</> or
    <firstterm>constraints</>, concatenated.
    It matches a match for the first, followed by a match for the second, etc;
    an empty branch matches the empty string.
2839
   </para>
2840

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   <para>
2842 2843 2844 2845 2846 2847 2848 2849
    A quantified atom is an <firstterm>atom</> possibly followed
    by a single <firstterm>quantifier</>.
    Without a quantifier, it matches a match for the atom.
    With a quantifier, it can match some number of matches of the atom.
    An <firstterm>atom</firstterm> can be any of the possibilities
    shown in <xref linkend="posix-atoms-table">.
    The possible quantifiers and their meanings are shown in
    <xref linkend="posix-quantifiers-table">.
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   </para>
2851

2852
   <para>
2853 2854 2855 2856 2857 2858 2859 2860 2861 2862 2863 2864 2865 2866 2867 2868 2869 2870 2871 2872 2873 2874 2875 2876 2877 2878 2879 2880 2881 2882 2883 2884 2885 2886 2887 2888 2889 2890 2891 2892 2893 2894 2895 2896 2897 2898 2899 2900 2901 2902 2903 2904 2905 2906 2907 2908 2909 2910 2911 2912 2913 2914 2915 2916 2917 2918 2919 2920 2921 2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928 2929 2930 2931 2932 2933
    A <firstterm>constraint</> matches an empty string, but matches only when
    specific conditions are met.  A constraint can be used where an atom
    could be used, except it may not be followed by a quantifier.
    The simple constraints are shown in
    <xref linkend="posix-constraints-table">;
    some more constraints are described later.
   </para>


   <table id="posix-atoms-table">
    <title>Regular Expression Atoms</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Atom</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>(</><replaceable>re</><literal>)</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>re</> is any regular expression)
       matches a match for
       <replaceable>re</>, with the match noted for possible reporting </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>(?:</><replaceable>re</><literal>)</> </entry>
       <entry> as above, but the match is not noted for reporting
       (a <quote>non-capturing</> set of parentheses)
       (AREs only) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>.</> </entry>
       <entry> matches any single character </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>[</><replaceable>chars</><literal>]</> </entry>
       <entry> a <firstterm>bracket expression</>,
       matching any one of the <replaceable>chars</> (see
       <xref linkend="posix-bracket-expressions"> for more detail) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\</><replaceable>k</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>k</> is a non-alphanumeric character)
       matches that character taken as an ordinary character,
       e.g. <literal>\\</> matches a backslash character </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\</><replaceable>c</> </entry>
       <entry> where <replaceable>c</> is alphanumeric
       (possibly followed by other characters)
       is an <firstterm>escape</>, see <xref linkend="posix-escape-sequences">
       (AREs only; in EREs and BREs, this matches <replaceable>c</>) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>{</> </entry>
       <entry> when followed by a character other than a digit,
       matches the left-brace character <literal>{</>;
       when followed by a digit, it is the beginning of a
       <replaceable>bound</> (see below) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <replaceable>x</> </entry>
       <entry> where <replaceable>x</> is a single character with no other
       significance, matches that character </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
    An RE may not end with <literal>\</>.
2934 2935 2936 2937
   </para>

   <note>
    <para>
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     Remember that the backslash (<literal>\</literal>) already has a special
     meaning in <productname>PostgreSQL</> string literals.
     To write a pattern constant that contains a backslash,
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     you must write two backslashes in the statement.
2942
    </para>
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   </note>

   <table id="posix-quantifiers-table">
    <title>Regular Expression Quantifiers</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Quantifier</entry>
       <entry>Matches</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>*</> </entry>
       <entry> a sequence of 0 or more matches of the atom </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>+</> </entry>
       <entry> a sequence of 1 or more matches of the atom </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>?</> </entry>
       <entry> a sequence of 0 or 1 matches of the atom </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>}</> </entry>
       <entry> a sequence of exactly <replaceable>m</> matches of the atom </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,}</> </entry>
       <entry> a sequence of <replaceable>m</> or more matches of the atom </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry>
       <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,</><replaceable>n</><literal>}</> </entry>
       <entry> a sequence of <replaceable>m</> through <replaceable>n</>
       (inclusive) matches of the atom; <replaceable>m</> may not exceed
       <replaceable>n</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>*?</> </entry>
       <entry> non-greedy version of <literal>*</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>+?</> </entry>
       <entry> non-greedy version of <literal>+</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>??</> </entry>
       <entry> non-greedy version of <literal>?</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>}?</> </entry>
       <entry> non-greedy version of <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>}</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,}?</> </entry>
       <entry> non-greedy version of <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,}</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry>
       <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,</><replaceable>n</><literal>}?</> </entry>
       <entry> non-greedy version of <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,</><replaceable>n</><literal>}</> </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
    The forms using <literal>{</><replaceable>...</><literal>}</>
    are known as <firstterm>bound</>s.
    The numbers <replaceable>m</> and <replaceable>n</> within a bound are
    unsigned decimal integers with permissible values from 0 to 255 inclusive.
   </para>

    <para>
     <firstterm>Non-greedy</> quantifiers (available in AREs only) match the
     same possibilities as their corresponding normal (<firstterm>greedy</>)
     counterparts, but prefer the smallest number rather than the largest
     number of matches.
     See <xref linkend="posix-matching-rules"> for more detail.
   </para>

   <note>
    <para>
     A quantifier cannot immediately follow another quantifier.
     A quantifier cannot
3043 3044 3045 3046
     begin an expression or subexpression or follow
     <literal>^</literal> or <literal>|</literal>.
    </para>
   </note>
3047

3048 3049 3050 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056 3057 3058 3059 3060 3061 3062 3063 3064 3065 3066 3067 3068 3069 3070 3071 3072 3073 3074 3075 3076 3077 3078 3079 3080 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086
   <table id="posix-constraints-table">
    <title>Regular Expression Constraints</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Constraint</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>^</> </entry>
       <entry> matches at the beginning of the string </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>$</> </entry>
       <entry> matches at the end of the string </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>(?=</><replaceable>re</><literal>)</> </entry>
       <entry> <firstterm>positive lookahead</> matches at any point
       where a substring matching <replaceable>re</> begins
       (AREs only) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>(?!</><replaceable>re</><literal>)</> </entry>
       <entry> <firstterm>negative lookahead</> matches at any point
       where no substring matching <replaceable>re</> begins
       (AREs only) </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

3087
   <para>
3088 3089 3090
    Lookahead constraints may not contain <firstterm>back references</>
    (see <xref linkend="posix-escape-sequences">),
    and all parentheses within them are considered non-capturing.
3091
   </para>
3092 3093 3094 3095
   </sect3>

   <sect3 id="posix-bracket-expressions">
    <title>Bracket Expressions</title>
3096

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   <para>
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    A <firstterm>bracket expression</firstterm> is a list of
    characters enclosed in <literal>[]</literal>.  It normally matches
    any single character from the list (but see below).  If the list
    begins with <literal>^</literal>, it matches any single character
3102 3103
    <emphasis>not</> from the rest of the list.
    If two characters
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    in the list are separated by <literal>-</literal>, this is
    shorthand for the full range of characters between those two
    (inclusive) in the collating sequence,
    e.g. <literal>[0-9]</literal> in <acronym>ASCII</acronym> matches
    any decimal digit.  It is illegal for two ranges to share an
    endpoint, e.g.  <literal>a-c-e</literal>.  Ranges are very
3110
    collating-sequence-dependent, so portable programs should avoid
3111
    relying on them.
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   </para>
3113

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   <para>
3115 3116 3117 3118 3119 3120
    To include a literal <literal>]</literal> in the list, make it the
    first character (following a possible <literal>^</literal>).  To
    include a literal <literal>-</literal>, make it the first or last
    character, or the second endpoint of a range.  To use a literal
    <literal>-</literal> as the first endpoint of a range, enclose it
    in <literal>[.</literal> and <literal>.]</literal> to make it a
3121 3122 3123 3124 3125 3126 3127
    collating element (see below).  With the exception of these characters,
    some combinations using <literal>[</literal>
    (see next paragraphs), and escapes (AREs only), all other special
    characters lose their special significance within a bracket expression.
    In particular, <literal>\</literal> is not special when following
    ERE or BRE rules, though it is special (as introducing an escape)
    in AREs.
3128 3129 3130 3131
   </para>

   <para>
    Within a bracket expression, a collating element (a character, a
3132
    multiple-character sequence that collates as if it were a single
3133 3134 3135 3136
    character, or a collating-sequence name for either) enclosed in
    <literal>[.</literal> and <literal>.]</literal> stands for the
    sequence of characters of that collating element.  The sequence is
    a single element of the bracket expression's list.  A bracket
3137
    expression containing a multiple-character collating element can thus
3138 3139 3140 3141 3142 3143
    match more than one character, e.g. if the collating sequence
    includes a <literal>ch</literal> collating element, then the RE
    <literal>[[.ch.]]*c</literal> matches the first five characters of
    <literal>chchcc</literal>.
   </para>

3144 3145 3146 3147 3148 3149 3150
   <note>
    <para>
     <productname>PostgreSQL</> currently has no multi-character collating
     elements. This information describes possible future behavior.
    </para>
   </note>

3151 3152 3153 3154 3155 3156 3157 3158 3159 3160 3161 3162 3163 3164 3165 3166 3167 3168 3169 3170 3171 3172 3173 3174 3175 3176 3177 3178 3179 3180 3181 3182 3183
   <para>
    Within a bracket expression, a collating element enclosed in
    <literal>[=</literal> and <literal>=]</literal> is an equivalence
    class, standing for the sequences of characters of all collating
    elements equivalent to that one, including itself.  (If there are
    no other equivalent collating elements, the treatment is as if the
    enclosing delimiters were <literal>[.</literal> and
    <literal>.]</literal>.)  For example, if <literal>o</literal> and
    <literal>^</literal> are the members of an equivalence class, then
    <literal>[[=o=]]</literal>, <literal>[[=^=]]</literal>, and
    <literal>[o^]</literal> are all synonymous.  An equivalence class
    may not be an endpoint of a range.
   </para>

   <para>
    Within a bracket expression, the name of a character class
    enclosed in <literal>[:</literal> and <literal>:]</literal> stands
    for the list of all characters belonging to that class.  Standard
    character class names are: <literal>alnum</literal>,
    <literal>alpha</literal>, <literal>blank</literal>,
    <literal>cntrl</literal>, <literal>digit</literal>,
    <literal>graph</literal>, <literal>lower</literal>,
    <literal>print</literal>, <literal>punct</literal>,
    <literal>space</literal>, <literal>upper</literal>,
    <literal>xdigit</literal>.  These stand for the character classes
    defined in
    <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctype</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
    A locale may provide others.  A character class may not be used as
    an endpoint of a range.
   </para>

   <para>
    There are two special cases of bracket expressions:  the bracket
3184
    expressions <literal>[[:&lt;:]]</literal> and
3185 3186
    <literal>[[:&gt;:]]</literal> are constraints,
    matching empty strings at the beginning
3187
    and end of a word respectively.  A word is defined as a sequence
3188 3189 3190
    of word characters that is neither preceded nor followed by word
    characters.  A word character is an <literal>alnum</> character (as
    defined by
3191 3192
    <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctype</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>)
    or an underscore.  This is an extension, compatible with but not
3193 3194 3195 3196 3197 3198 3199 3200 3201 3202 3203 3204 3205 3206 3207 3208 3209 3210 3211 3212 3213 3214 3215 3216 3217 3218 3219 3220 3221 3222 3223 3224 3225 3226 3227 3228 3229 3230 3231 3232 3233 3234 3235 3236 3237 3238 3239 3240 3241 3242 3243 3244 3245 3246 3247 3248 3249
    specified by <acronym>POSIX</acronym> 1003.2, and should be used with
    caution in software intended to be portable to other systems.
    The constraint escapes described below are usually preferable (they
    are no more standard, but are certainly easier to type).
   </para>
   </sect3>

   <sect3 id="posix-escape-sequences">
    <title>Regular Expression Escapes</title>

   <para>
    <firstterm>Escapes</> are special sequences beginning with <literal>\</>
    followed by an alphanumeric character. Escapes come in several varieties:
    character entry, class shorthands, constraint escapes, and back references.
    A <literal>\</> followed by an alphanumeric character but not constituting
    a valid escape is illegal in AREs.
    In EREs, there are no escapes: outside a bracket expression,
    a <literal>\</> followed by an alphanumeric character merely stands for
    that character as an ordinary character, and inside a bracket expression,
    <literal>\</> is an ordinary character.
    (The latter is the one actual incompatibility between EREs and AREs.)
   </para>

   <para>
    <firstterm>Character-entry escapes</> exist to make it easier to specify
    non-printing and otherwise inconvenient characters in REs.  They are
    shown in <xref linkend="posix-character-entry-escapes-table">.
   </para>

   <para>
    <firstterm>Class-shorthand escapes</> provide shorthands for certain
    commonly-used character classes.  They are
    shown in <xref linkend="posix-class-shorthand-escapes-table">.
   </para>

   <para>
    A <firstterm>constraint escape</> is a constraint,
    matching the empty string if specific conditions are met,
    written as an escape.  They are
    shown in <xref linkend="posix-constraint-escapes-table">.
   </para>

   <para>
    A <firstterm>back reference</> (<literal>\</><replaceable>n</>) matches the
    same string matched by the previous parenthesized subexpression specified
    by the number <replaceable>n</>
    (see <xref linkend="posix-constraint-backref-table">).  For example,
    <literal>([bc])\1</> matches <literal>bb</> or <literal>cc</>
    but not <literal>bc</> or <literal>cb</>.
    The subexpression must entirely precede the back reference in the RE.
    Subexpressions are numbered in the order of their leading parentheses.
    Non-capturing parentheses do not define subexpressions.
   </para>

   <note>
    <para>
     Keep in mind that an escape's leading <literal>\</> will need to be
3250 3251 3252 3253
     doubled when entering the pattern as an SQL string constant.  For example:
<programlisting>
'123' ~ '^\\d{3}' <lineannotation>true</lineannotation>
</programlisting>
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    </para>
   </note>

   <table id="posix-character-entry-escapes-table">
    <title>Regular Expression Character-Entry Escapes</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Escape</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\a</> </entry>
       <entry> alert (bell) character, as in C </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\b</> </entry>
       <entry> backspace, as in C </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\B</> </entry>
       <entry> synonym for <literal>\</> to help reduce the need for backslash
       doubling </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\c</><replaceable>X</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>X</> is any character) the character whose
       low-order 5 bits are the same as those of
       <replaceable>X</>, and whose other bits are all zero </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\e</> </entry>
       <entry> the character whose collating-sequence name
       is <literal>ESC</>,
       or failing that, the character with octal value 033 </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\f</> </entry>
3301
       <entry> form feed, as in C </entry>
3302 3303 3304 3305 3306 3307 3308 3309 3310 3311 3312 3313 3314 3315 3316 3317 3318 3319 3320 3321 3322 3323 3324 3325 3326 3327 3328 3329 3330 3331 3332 3333 3334 3335 3336 3337 3338 3339 3340 3341 3342 3343 3344 3345 3346 3347 3348 3349 3350 3351 3352 3353 3354 3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364 3365 3366 3367 3368 3369 3370 3371 3372 3373 3374 3375 3376 3377 3378 3379 3380 3381 3382 3383 3384 3385 3386 3387 3388 3389 3390 3391 3392 3393 3394 3395 3396 3397 3398 3399 3400 3401 3402 3403 3404 3405 3406 3407 3408 3409 3410 3411 3412 3413 3414 3415 3416 3417 3418 3419 3420 3421 3422 3423 3424 3425 3426 3427 3428 3429 3430 3431 3432 3433 3434 3435 3436 3437 3438 3439
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\n</> </entry>
       <entry> newline, as in C </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\r</> </entry>
       <entry> carriage return, as in C </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\t</> </entry>
       <entry> horizontal tab, as in C </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\u</><replaceable>wxyz</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>wxyz</> is exactly four hexadecimal digits)
       the Unicode character <literal>U+</><replaceable>wxyz</>
       in the local byte ordering </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\U</><replaceable>stuvwxyz</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>stuvwxyz</> is exactly eight hexadecimal
       digits)
       reserved for a somewhat-hypothetical Unicode extension to 32 bits
       </entry> 
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\v</> </entry>
       <entry> vertical tab, as in C </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\x</><replaceable>hhh</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>hhh</> is any sequence of hexadecimal
       digits)
       the character whose hexadecimal value is
       <literal>0x</><replaceable>hhh</>
       (a single character no matter how many hexadecimal digits are used)
       </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\0</> </entry>
       <entry> the character whose value is <literal>0</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\</><replaceable>xy</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>xy</> is exactly two octal digits,
       and is not a <firstterm>back reference</>)
       the character whose octal value is
       <literal>0</><replaceable>xy</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\</><replaceable>xyz</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>xyz</> is exactly three octal digits,
       and is not a <firstterm>back reference</>)
       the character whose octal value is
       <literal>0</><replaceable>xyz</> </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
    Hexadecimal digits are <literal>0</>-<literal>9</>,
    <literal>a</>-<literal>f</>, and <literal>A</>-<literal>F</>.
    Octal digits are <literal>0</>-<literal>7</>.
   </para>

   <para>
    The character-entry escapes are always taken as ordinary characters.
    For example, <literal>\135</> is <literal>]</> in ASCII, but
    <literal>\135</> does not terminate a bracket expression.
   </para>

   <table id="posix-class-shorthand-escapes-table">
    <title>Regular Expression Class-Shorthand Escapes</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Escape</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\d</> </entry>
       <entry> <literal>[[:digit:]]</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\s</> </entry>
       <entry> <literal>[[:space:]]</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\w</> </entry>
       <entry> <literal>[[:alnum:]_]</>
       (note underscore is included) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\D</> </entry>
       <entry> <literal>[^[:digit:]]</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\S</> </entry>
       <entry> <literal>[^[:space:]]</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\W</> </entry>
       <entry> <literal>[^[:alnum:]_]</>
       (note underscore is included) </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
    Within bracket expressions, <literal>\d</>, <literal>\s</>,
    and <literal>\w</> lose their outer brackets,
    and <literal>\D</>, <literal>\S</>, and <literal>\W</> are illegal.
    (So, for example, <literal>[a-c\d]</> is equivalent to
    <literal>[a-c[:digit:]]</>.
    Also, <literal>[a-c\D]</>, which is equivalent to
    <literal>[a-c^[:digit:]]</>, is illegal.)
3440 3441
   </para>

3442 3443 3444 3445 3446 3447 3448 3449 3450 3451 3452 3453 3454 3455 3456 3457 3458 3459 3460 3461 3462 3463 3464 3465 3466 3467 3468 3469 3470 3471 3472 3473 3474 3475 3476 3477 3478 3479 3480 3481 3482 3483 3484 3485 3486 3487 3488 3489 3490 3491 3492 3493 3494 3495 3496 3497 3498 3499 3500 3501 3502 3503 3504 3505 3506 3507 3508 3509 3510 3511 3512 3513 3514 3515 3516 3517 3518 3519 3520 3521 3522 3523 3524 3525 3526 3527 3528 3529 3530 3531 3532 3533 3534 3535 3536 3537 3538 3539 3540 3541 3542 3543 3544 3545 3546
   <table id="posix-constraint-escapes-table">
    <title>Regular Expression Constraint Escapes</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Escape</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\A</> </entry>
       <entry> matches only at the beginning of the string
       (see <xref linkend="posix-matching-rules"> for how this differs from
       <literal>^</>) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\m</> </entry>
       <entry> matches only at the beginning of a word </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\M</> </entry>
       <entry> matches only at the end of a word </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\y</> </entry>
       <entry> matches only at the beginning or end of a word </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\Y</> </entry>
       <entry> matches only at a point that is not the beginning or end of a
       word </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\Z</> </entry>
       <entry> matches only at the end of the string
       (see <xref linkend="posix-matching-rules"> for how this differs from
       <literal>$</>) </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
    A word is defined as in the specification of
    <literal>[[:&lt;:]]</> and <literal>[[:&gt;:]]</> above.
    Constraint escapes are illegal within bracket expressions.
   </para>

   <table id="posix-constraint-backref-table">
    <title>Regular Expression Back References</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Escape</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\</><replaceable>m</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>m</> is a nonzero digit)
       a back reference to the <replaceable>m</>'th subexpression </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>\</><replaceable>mnn</> </entry>
       <entry> (where <replaceable>m</> is a nonzero digit, and
       <replaceable>nn</> is some more digits, and the decimal value
       <replaceable>mnn</> is not greater than the number of closing capturing
       parentheses seen so far) 
       a back reference to the <replaceable>mnn</>'th subexpression </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <note>
    <para>
     There is an inherent historical ambiguity between octal character-entry 
     escapes and back references, which is resolved by heuristics,
     as hinted at above.
     A leading zero always indicates an octal escape.
     A single non-zero digit, not followed by another digit,
     is always taken as a back reference.
     A multi-digit sequence not starting with a zero is taken as a back 
     reference if it comes after a suitable subexpression
     (i.e. the number is in the legal range for a back reference),
     and otherwise is taken as octal.
    </para>
   </note>
   </sect3>

   <sect3 id="posix-metasyntax">
    <title>Regular Expression Metasyntax</title>

3547
   <para>
3548 3549
    In addition to the main syntax described above, there are some special
    forms and miscellaneous syntactic facilities available.
3550 3551 3552
   </para>

   <para>
3553
    Normally the flavor of RE being used is determined by
3554
    <varname>regex_flavor</>.
3555
    However, this can be overridden by a <firstterm>director</> prefix.
3556
    If an RE of any flavor begins with <literal>***:</>,
3557
    the rest of the RE is taken as an ARE.
3558 3559 3560
    If an RE of any flavor begins with <literal>***=</>,
    the rest of the RE is taken to be a literal string,
    with all characters considered ordinary characters.
3561 3562 3563
   </para>

   <para>
3564 3565 3566 3567
    An ARE may begin with <firstterm>embedded options</>:
    a sequence <literal>(?</><replaceable>xyz</><literal>)</>
    (where <replaceable>xyz</> is one or more alphabetic characters)
    specifies options affecting the rest of the RE.
3568 3569
    These options override any previously determined options (including
    both the RE flavor and case sensitivity).
3570 3571 3572 3573 3574 3575 3576 3577 3578 3579 3580 3581 3582 3583 3584 3585 3586 3587 3588 3589 3590 3591 3592
    The available option letters are
    shown in <xref linkend="posix-embedded-options-table">.
   </para>

   <table id="posix-embedded-options-table">
    <title>ARE Embedded-Option Letters</title>

    <tgroup cols="2">
     <thead>
      <row>
       <entry>Option</entry>
       <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
       <entry> <literal>b</> </entry>
       <entry> rest of RE is a BRE </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>c</> </entry>
3593
       <entry> case-sensitive matching (overrides operator type) </entry>
3594 3595 3596 3597 3598 3599 3600 3601 3602 3603
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>e</> </entry>
       <entry> rest of RE is an ERE </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>i</> </entry>
       <entry> case-insensitive matching (see
3604
       <xref linkend="posix-matching-rules">) (overrides operator type) </entry>
3605 3606 3607 3608 3609 3610 3611 3612 3613 3614 3615 3616 3617 3618 3619 3620 3621 3622 3623 3624 3625 3626 3627 3628 3629 3630 3631
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>m</> </entry>
       <entry> historical synonym for <literal>n</> </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>n</> </entry>
       <entry> newline-sensitive matching (see
       <xref linkend="posix-matching-rules">) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>p</> </entry>
       <entry> partial newline-sensitive matching (see
       <xref linkend="posix-matching-rules">) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>q</> </entry>
       <entry> rest of RE is a literal (<quote>quoted</>) string, all ordinary
       characters </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>s</> </entry>
3632
       <entry> non-newline-sensitive matching (default) </entry>
3633 3634 3635 3636
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>t</> </entry>
3637
       <entry> tight syntax (default; see below) </entry>
3638 3639 3640 3641 3642 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 3655 3656 3657 3658 3659 3660 3661 3662 3663 3664 3665 3666 3667 3668 3669 3670 3671 3672 3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 3680 3681 3682 3683 3684 3685 3686 3687 3688 3689 3690 3691 3692 3693 3694 3695 3696 3697 3698 3699 3700 3701 3702 3703 3704 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 3720 3721 3722 3723 3724 3725 3726 3727 3728 3729 3730 3731 3732 3733 3734 3735 3736 3737 3738 3739 3740 3741 3742 3743 3744 3745 3746 3747 3748 3749 3750 3751 3752 3753 3754 3755 3756 3757 3758 3759 3760 3761 3762 3763 3764 3765 3766 3767 3768 3769 3770 3771 3772 3773 3774 3775 3776 3777 3778 3779 3780 3781 3782 3783 3784
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>w</> </entry>
       <entry> inverse partial newline-sensitive (<quote>weird</>) matching
       (see <xref linkend="posix-matching-rules">) </entry>
       </row>

       <row>
       <entry> <literal>x</> </entry>
       <entry> expanded syntax (see below) </entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
    Embedded options take effect at the <literal>)</> terminating the sequence.
    They are available only at the start of an ARE,
    and may not be used later within it.
   </para>

   <para>
    In addition to the usual (<firstterm>tight</>) RE syntax, in which all
    characters are significant, there is an <firstterm>expanded</> syntax,
    available by specifying the embedded <literal>x</> option.
    In the expanded syntax,
    white-space characters in the RE are ignored, as are
    all characters between a <literal>#</>
    and the following newline (or the end of the RE).  This
    permits paragraphing and commenting a complex RE.
    There are three exceptions to that basic rule:

    <itemizedlist>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       a white-space character or <literal>#</> preceded by <literal>\</> is
       retained
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       white space or <literal>#</> within a bracket expression is retained
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       white space and comments are illegal within multi-character symbols,
       like the ARE <literal>(?:</> or the BRE <literal>\(</>
      </para>
     </listitem>
    </itemizedlist>

    Expanded-syntax white-space characters are blank, tab, newline, and
    any character that belongs to the <replaceable>space</> character class.
   </para>

   <para>
    Finally, in an ARE, outside bracket expressions, the sequence
    <literal>(?#</><replaceable>ttt</><literal>)</>
    (where <replaceable>ttt</> is any text not containing a <literal>)</>)
    is a comment, completely ignored.
    Again, this is not allowed between the characters of
    multi-character symbols, like <literal>(?:</>.
    Such comments are more a historical artifact than a useful facility,
    and their use is deprecated; use the expanded syntax instead.
   </para>

   <para>
    <emphasis>None</> of these metasyntax extensions is available if
    an initial <literal>***=</> director
    has specified that the user's input be treated as a literal string
    rather than as an RE.
   </para>
   </sect3>

   <sect3 id="posix-matching-rules">
    <title>Regular Expression Matching Rules</title>

   <para>
    In the event that an RE could match more than one substring of a given
    string, the RE matches the one starting earliest in the string.
    If the RE could match more than one substring starting at that point,
    its choice is determined by its <firstterm>preference</>:
    either the longest substring, or the shortest.
   </para>

   <para>
    Most atoms, and all constraints, have no preference.
    A parenthesized RE has the same preference (possibly none) as the RE.
    A quantified atom with quantifier
    <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>}</>
    or
    <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>}?</>
    has the same preference (possibly none) as the atom itself.
    A quantified atom with other normal quantifiers (including
    <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,</><replaceable>n</><literal>}</>
    with <replaceable>m</> equal to <replaceable>n</>)
    prefers longest match.
    A quantified atom with other non-greedy quantifiers (including
    <literal>{</><replaceable>m</><literal>,</><replaceable>n</><literal>}?</>
    with <replaceable>m</> equal to <replaceable>n</>)
    prefers shortest match.
    A branch has the same preference as the first quantified atom in it
    which has a preference.
    An RE consisting of two or more branches connected by the
    <literal>|</> operator prefers longest match.
   </para>

   <para>
    Subject to the constraints imposed by the rules for matching the whole RE,
    subexpressions also match the longest or shortest possible substrings,
    based on their preferences,
    with subexpressions starting earlier in the RE taking priority over
    ones starting later.
    Note that outer subexpressions thus take priority over
    their component subexpressions.
   </para>

   <para>
    The quantifiers <literal>{1,1}</> and <literal>{1,1}?</>
    can be used to force longest and shortest preference, respectively,
    on a subexpression or a whole RE.
   </para>

   <para>
    Match lengths are measured in characters, not collating elements.
    An empty string is considered longer than no match at all.
    For example:
    <literal>bb*</>
    matches the three middle characters of <literal>abbbc</>;
    <literal>(week|wee)(night|knights)</>
    matches all ten characters of <literal>weeknights</>;
    when <literal>(.*).*</>
    is matched against <literal>abc</> the parenthesized subexpression
    matches all three characters; and when
    <literal>(a*)*</> is matched against <literal>bc</>
    both the whole RE and the parenthesized
    subexpression match an empty string.
   </para>

   <para>
    If case-independent matching is specified,
    the effect is much as if all case distinctions had vanished from the
    alphabet.
    When an alphabetic that exists in multiple cases appears as an
    ordinary character outside a bracket expression, it is effectively
3785
    transformed into a bracket expression containing both cases,
3786 3787 3788 3789 3790 3791 3792 3793 3794 3795 3796 3797 3798 3799 3800 3801 3802 3803 3804 3805 3806 3807 3808 3809 3810 3811 3812 3813 3814 3815 3816 3817 3818 3819 3820 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825 3826 3827 3828 3829 3830 3831 3832 3833 3834 3835 3836 3837 3838 3839 3840 3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 3846 3847 3848 3849 3850 3851 3852 3853 3854 3855 3856
    e.g. <literal>x</> becomes <literal>[xX]</>.
    When it appears inside a bracket expression, all case counterparts
    of it are added to the bracket expression, e.g.
    <literal>[x]</> becomes <literal>[xX]</>
    and <literal>[^x]</> becomes <literal>[^xX]</>.
   </para>

   <para>
    If newline-sensitive matching is specified, <literal>.</>
    and bracket expressions using <literal>^</>
    will never match the newline character
    (so that matches will never cross newlines unless the RE
    explicitly arranges it)
    and <literal>^</>and <literal>$</>
    will match the empty string after and before a newline
    respectively, in addition to matching at beginning and end of string
    respectively.
    But the ARE escapes <literal>\A</> and <literal>\Z</>
    continue to match beginning or end of string <emphasis>only</>.
   </para>

   <para>
    If partial newline-sensitive matching is specified,
    this affects <literal>.</> and bracket expressions
    as with newline-sensitive matching, but not <literal>^</>
    and <literal>$</>.
   </para>

   <para>
    If inverse partial newline-sensitive matching is specified,
    this affects <literal>^</> and <literal>$</>
    as with newline-sensitive matching, but not <literal>.</>
    and bracket expressions.
    This isn't very useful but is provided for symmetry.
   </para>
   </sect3>

   <sect3 id="posix-limits-compatibility">
    <title>Limits and Compatibility</title>

   <para>
    No particular limit is imposed on the length of REs in this
    implementation.  However,
    programs intended to be highly portable should not employ REs longer
    than 256 bytes,
    as a POSIX-compliant implementation can refuse to accept such REs.
   </para>

   <para>
    The only feature of AREs that is actually incompatible with
    POSIX EREs is that <literal>\</> does not lose its special
    significance inside bracket expressions.
    All other ARE features use syntax which is illegal or has
    undefined or unspecified effects in POSIX EREs;
    the <literal>***</> syntax of directors likewise is outside the POSIX
    syntax for both BREs and EREs.
   </para>

   <para>
    Many of the ARE extensions are borrowed from Perl, but some have
    been changed to clean them up, and a few Perl extensions are not present.
    Incompatibilities of note include <literal>\b</>, <literal>\B</>,
    the lack of special treatment for a trailing newline,
    the addition of complemented bracket expressions to the things
    affected by newline-sensitive matching,
    the restrictions on parentheses and back references in lookahead
    constraints, and the longest/shortest-match (rather than first-match)
    matching semantics.
   </para>

   <para>
3857
    Two significant incompatibilities exist between AREs and the ERE syntax
3858 3859 3860 3861 3862 3863 3864 3865 3866 3867 3868 3869 3870 3871 3872 3873 3874 3875 3876 3877
    recognized by pre-7.4 releases of <productname>PostgreSQL</>:

    <itemizedlist>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       In AREs, <literal>\</> followed by an alphanumeric character is either
       an escape or an error, while in previous releases, it was just another
       way of writing the alphanumeric.
       This should not be much of a problem because there was no reason to
       write such a sequence in earlier releases.
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       In AREs, <literal>\</> remains a special character within
       <literal>[]</>, so a literal <literal>\</> within a bracket
       expression must be written <literal>\\</>.
      </para>
     </listitem>
    </itemizedlist>
3878 3879 3880

    While these differences are unlikely to create a problem for most
    applications, you can avoid them if necessary by
3881
    setting <varname>regex_flavor</> to <literal>extended</>.
3882 3883 3884 3885 3886
   </para>
   </sect3>

   <sect3 id="posix-basic-regexes">
    <title>Basic Regular Expressions</title>
3887

3888 3889 3890 3891 3892 3893 3894 3895 3896 3897 3898 3899 3900 3901 3902 3903 3904 3905 3906 3907 3908 3909 3910 3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917
   <para>
    BREs differ from EREs in several respects.
    <literal>|</>, <literal>+</>, and <literal>?</>
    are ordinary characters and there is no equivalent
    for their functionality.
    The delimiters for bounds are
    <literal>\{</> and <literal>\}</>,
    with <literal>{</> and <literal>}</>
    by themselves ordinary characters.
    The parentheses for nested subexpressions are
    <literal>\(</> and <literal>\)</>,
    with <literal>(</> and <literal>)</> by themselves ordinary characters.
    <literal>^</> is an ordinary character except at the beginning of the
    RE or the beginning of a parenthesized subexpression,
    <literal>$</> is an ordinary character except at the end of the
    RE or the end of a parenthesized subexpression,
    and <literal>*</> is an ordinary character if it appears at the beginning
    of the RE or the beginning of a parenthesized subexpression
    (after a possible leading <literal>^</>).
    Finally, single-digit back references are available, and
    <literal>\&lt;</> and <literal>\&gt;</>
    are synonyms for
    <literal>[[:&lt;:]]</> and <literal>[[:&gt;:]]</>
    respectively; no other escapes are available.
   </para>
   </sect3>

<!-- end re_syntax.n man page -->

  </sect2>
3918 3919 3920 3921
 </sect1>


  <sect1 id="functions-formatting">
3922
   <title>Data Type Formatting Functions</title>
3923

3924 3925 3926 3927
   <indexterm zone="functions-formatting">
    <primary>formatting</primary>
   </indexterm>

P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
3928 3929 3930 3931
   <indexterm zone="functions-formatting">
    <primary>to_char</primary>
   </indexterm>

3932
   <para>
3933
    The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> formatting functions
3934 3935
    provide a powerful set of tools for converting various data types
    (date/time, integer, floating point, numeric) to formatted strings
3936
    and for converting from formatted strings to specific data types.
3937
    <xref linkend="functions-formatting-table"> lists them.
3938
    These functions all follow a common calling convention: the first
3939
    argument is the value to be formatted and the second argument is a
3940
    template that defines the output or input format.
3941 3942
   </para>

3943
    <table id="functions-formatting-table">
3944 3945 3946 3947 3948
     <title>Formatting Functions</title>
     <tgroup cols="4">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Function</entry>
3949
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
3950 3951 3952 3953 3954 3955
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
3956
	<entry><literal><function>to_char</function>(<type>timestamp</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
3957 3958
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
	<entry>convert time stamp to string</entry>
3959
	<entry><literal>to_char(current_timestamp, 'HH12:MI:SS')</literal></entry>
3960
       </row>
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3961
       <row>
3962
	<entry><literal><function>to_char</function>(<type>interval</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
3963
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
B
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3964
	<entry>convert interval to string</entry>
3965
	<entry><literal>to_char(interval '15h&nbsp;2m&nbsp;12s', 'HH24:MI:SS')</literal></entry>
B
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3966
       </row>
3967
       <row>
3968
	<entry><literal><function>to_char</function>(<type>int</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
3969
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
3970
	<entry>convert integer to string</entry>
3971
	<entry><literal>to_char(125, '999')</literal></entry>
3972 3973
       </row>
       <row>
3974 3975
	<entry><literal><function>to_char</function>(<type>double precision</type>,
        <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
3976
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
3977
	<entry>convert real/double precision to string</entry>
3978
	<entry><literal>to_char(125.8::real, '999D9')</literal></entry>
3979 3980
       </row>
       <row>
3981
	<entry><literal><function>to_char</function>(<type>numeric</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
3982
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
3983
	<entry>convert numeric to string</entry>
3984
	<entry><literal>to_char(-125.8, '999D99S')</literal></entry>
3985 3986
       </row>
       <row>
3987
	<entry><literal><function>to_date</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
3988
	<entry><type>date</type></entry>
3989
	<entry>convert string to date</entry>
3990
	<entry><literal>to_date('05&nbsp;Dec&nbsp;2000', 'DD&nbsp;Mon&nbsp;YYYY')</literal></entry>
3991 3992
       </row>
       <row>
3993
	<entry><literal><function>to_timestamp</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
3994
	<entry><type>timestamp with time zone</type></entry>
3995
	<entry>convert string to time stamp</entry>
3996
	<entry><literal>to_timestamp('05&nbsp;Dec&nbsp;2000', 'DD&nbsp;Mon&nbsp;YYYY')</literal></entry>
3997 3998
       </row>
       <row>
3999
	<entry><literal><function>to_number</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
4000
	<entry><type>numeric</type></entry>
4001
	<entry>convert string to numeric</entry>
4002
	<entry><literal>to_number('12,454.8-', '99G999D9S')</literal></entry>
4003 4004 4005 4006 4007
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

4008
   <para>
4009 4010
    Warning: <literal><function>to_char</function>(<type>interval</type>, <type>text</type>)</literal> 
    is deprecated and should not be used in newly-written code. It will be removed in the next version.
4011 4012
   </para>

4013
   <para>
4014
    In an output template string (for <function>to_char</>), there are certain patterns that are
4015 4016
    recognized and replaced with appropriately-formatted data from the value
    to be formatted.  Any text that is not a template pattern is simply
4017
    copied verbatim.  Similarly, in an input template string (for anything but <function>to_char</>), template patterns
4018 4019 4020 4021
    identify the parts of the input data string to be looked at and the
    values to be found there.
   </para>

4022 4023 4024 4025 4026 4027
  <para>
   <xref linkend="functions-formatting-datetime-table"> shows the
   template patterns available for formatting date and time values.
  </para>

    <table id="functions-formatting-datetime-table">
4028
     <title>Template Patterns for Date/Time Formatting</title>
4029 4030 4031
     <tgroup cols="2">
      <thead>
       <row>
4032
	<entry>Pattern</entry>
4033 4034 4035 4036 4037
	<entry>Description</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
4038
	<entry><literal>HH</literal></entry>
4039
	<entry>hour of day (01-12)</entry>
4040 4041
       </row>
       <row>
4042
	<entry><literal>HH12</literal></entry>
4043
	<entry>hour of day (01-12)</entry>
4044
       </row>       
4045
       <row>
4046
	<entry><literal>HH24</literal></entry>
4047 4048
	<entry>hour of day (00-23)</entry>
       </row>       
4049
       <row>
4050
	<entry><literal>MI</literal></entry>
4051
	<entry>minute (00-59)</entry>
4052 4053
       </row>   
       <row>
4054
	<entry><literal>SS</literal></entry>
4055
	<entry>second (00-59)</entry>
4056
       </row>
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4057
       <row>
4058
	<entry><literal>MS</literal></entry>
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4059 4060 4061
	<entry>millisecond (000-999)</entry>
       </row>
       <row>
4062
	<entry><literal>US</literal></entry>
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4063 4064
	<entry>microsecond (000000-999999)</entry>
       </row>
4065
       <row>
4066
	<entry><literal>SSSS</literal></entry>
4067
	<entry>seconds past midnight (0-86399)</entry>
4068
       </row>
B
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4069
       <row>
4070
	<entry><literal>AM</literal> or <literal>A.M.</literal> or
4071
	<literal>PM</literal> or <literal>P.M.</literal></entry>
4072
	<entry>meridian indicator (uppercase)</entry>
B
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4073 4074
       </row>
       <row>
4075
	<entry><literal>am</literal> or <literal>a.m.</literal> or
4076
	<literal>pm</literal> or <literal>p.m.</literal></entry>
4077
	<entry>meridian indicator (lowercase)</entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4078
       </row>
4079
       <row>
4080
	<entry><literal>Y,YYY</literal></entry>
4081
	<entry>year (4 and more digits) with comma</entry>
4082 4083
       </row>
       <row>
4084
	<entry><literal>YYYY</literal></entry>
4085
	<entry>year (4 and more digits)</entry>
4086 4087
       </row>
       <row>
4088
	<entry><literal>YYY</literal></entry>
4089
	<entry>last 3 digits of year</entry>
4090 4091
       </row>
       <row>
4092
	<entry><literal>YY</literal></entry>
4093
	<entry>last 2 digits of year</entry>
4094 4095
       </row>
       <row>
4096
	<entry><literal>Y</literal></entry>
4097
	<entry>last digit of year</entry>
4098
       </row>
4099 4100 4101 4102 4103 4104 4105 4106 4107 4108 4109 4110 4111 4112 4113 4114
       <row>
	<entry><literal>IYYY</literal></entry>
	<entry>ISO year (4 and more digits)</entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry><literal>IYY</literal></entry>
	<entry>last 3 digits of ISO year</entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry><literal>IY</literal></entry>
	<entry>last 2 digits of ISO year</entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry><literal>I</literal></entry>
	<entry>last digits of ISO year</entry>
       </row>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4115
       <row>
4116
	<entry><literal>BC</literal> or <literal>B.C.</literal> or
4117
	<literal>AD</literal> or <literal>A.D.</literal></entry>
4118
	<entry>era indicator (uppercase)</entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4119 4120
       </row>
       <row>
4121
	<entry><literal>bc</literal> or <literal>b.c.</literal> or
4122
	<literal>ad</literal> or <literal>a.d.</literal></entry>
4123
	<entry>era indicator (lowercase)</entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4124
       </row>
4125
       <row>
4126
	<entry><literal>MONTH</literal></entry>
4127
	<entry>full uppercase month name (blank-padded to 9 chars)</entry>
4128 4129
       </row>
       <row>
4130
	<entry><literal>Month</literal></entry>
4131
	<entry>full mixed-case month name (blank-padded to 9 chars)</entry>
4132 4133
       </row>
       <row>
4134
	<entry><literal>month</literal></entry>
4135
	<entry>full lowercase month name (blank-padded to 9 chars)</entry>
4136 4137
       </row>
       <row>
4138
	<entry><literal>MON</literal></entry>
4139
	<entry>abbreviated uppercase month name (3 chars)</entry>
4140 4141
       </row>
       <row>
4142
	<entry><literal>Mon</literal></entry>
4143
	<entry>abbreviated mixed-case month name (3 chars)</entry>
4144 4145
       </row>
       <row>
4146
	<entry><literal>mon</literal></entry>
4147
	<entry>abbreviated lowercase month name (3 chars)</entry>
4148 4149
       </row>
       <row>
4150
	<entry><literal>MM</literal></entry>
4151
	<entry>month number (01-12)</entry>
4152 4153
       </row>
       <row>
4154
	<entry><literal>DAY</literal></entry>
4155
	<entry>full uppercase day name (blank-padded to 9 chars)</entry>
4156 4157
       </row>
       <row>
4158
	<entry><literal>Day</literal></entry>
4159
	<entry>full mixed-case day name (blank-padded to 9 chars)</entry>
4160 4161
       </row>
       <row>
4162
	<entry><literal>day</literal></entry>
4163
	<entry>full lowercase day name (blank-padded to 9 chars)</entry>
4164 4165
       </row>
       <row>
4166
	<entry><literal>DY</literal></entry>
4167
	<entry>abbreviated uppercase day name (3 chars)</entry>
4168 4169
       </row>
       <row>
4170
	<entry><literal>Dy</literal></entry>
4171
	<entry>abbreviated mixed-case day name (3 chars)</entry>
4172 4173
       </row>
       <row>
4174
	<entry><literal>dy</literal></entry>
4175
	<entry>abbreviated lowercase day name (3 chars)</entry>
4176 4177
       </row>
       <row>
4178
	<entry><literal>DDD</literal></entry>
4179
	<entry>day of year (001-366)</entry>
4180 4181
       </row>
       <row>
4182
	<entry><literal>DD</literal></entry>
4183
	<entry>day of month (01-31)</entry>
4184 4185
       </row>
       <row>
4186
	<entry><literal>D</literal></entry>
4187
	<entry>day of week (1-7; Sunday is 1)</entry>
4188 4189
       </row>
       <row>
4190
	<entry><literal>W</literal></entry>
4191
	<entry>week of month (1-5) (The first week starts on the first day of the month.)</entry>
4192 4193
       </row> 
       <row>
4194
	<entry><literal>WW</literal></entry>
4195
	<entry>week number of year (1-53) (The first week starts on the first day of the year.)</entry>
4196
       </row>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4197
       <row>
4198
	<entry><literal>IW</literal></entry>
4199
	<entry>ISO week number of year (The first Thursday of the new year is in week 1.)</entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4200
       </row>
4201
       <row>
4202
	<entry><literal>CC</literal></entry>
4203
	<entry>century (2 digits)</entry>
4204 4205
       </row>
       <row>
4206
	<entry><literal>J</literal></entry>
4207
	<entry>Julian Day (days since January 1, 4712 BC)</entry>
4208 4209
       </row>
       <row>
4210
	<entry><literal>Q</literal></entry>
4211
	<entry>quarter</entry>
4212 4213
       </row>
       <row>
4214
	<entry><literal>RM</literal></entry>
4215
	<entry>month in Roman numerals (I-XII; I=January) (uppercase)</entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4216 4217
       </row>
       <row>
4218
	<entry><literal>rm</literal></entry>
4219
	<entry>month in Roman numerals (i-xii; i=January) (lowercase)</entry>
4220
       </row>
4221
       <row>
4222
	<entry><literal>TZ</literal></entry>
4223
	<entry>time-zone name (uppercase)</entry>
4224 4225
       </row>
       <row>
4226
	<entry><literal>tz</literal></entry>
4227
	<entry>time-zone name (lowercase)</entry>
4228
       </row>
4229 4230 4231 4232 4233
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
4234
    Certain modifiers may be applied to any template pattern to alter its
4235 4236 4237
    behavior.  For example, <literal>FMMonth</literal>
    is the <literal>Month</literal> pattern with the
    <literal>FM</literal> modifier.
4238 4239
    <xref linkend="functions-formatting-datetimemod-table"> shows the
    modifier patterns for date/time formatting.
4240 4241
   </para>

4242
    <table id="functions-formatting-datetimemod-table">
4243
     <title>Template Pattern Modifiers for Date/Time Formatting</title>
4244 4245 4246
     <tgroup cols="3">
      <thead>
       <row>
4247
	<entry>Modifier</entry>
4248 4249 4250 4251 4252 4253
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
4254 4255
	<entry><literal>FM</literal> prefix</entry>
	<entry>fill mode (suppress padding blanks and zeroes)</entry>
4256
	<entry><literal>FMMonth</literal></entry>
4257 4258
       </row>
       <row>
4259
	<entry><literal>TH</literal> suffix</entry>
4260
	<entry>uppercase ordinal number suffix</entry>
4261
	<entry><literal>DDTH</literal></entry>
4262 4263
       </row>	
       <row>
4264
	<entry><literal>th</literal> suffix</entry>
4265
	<entry>lowercase ordinal number suffix</entry>
4266
	<entry><literal>DDth</literal></entry>
4267 4268
       </row>
       <row>
4269
	<entry><literal>FX</literal> prefix</entry>
4270
	<entry>fixed format global option (see usage notes)</entry>
4271
	<entry><literal>FX&nbsp;Month&nbsp;DD&nbsp;Day</literal></entry>
4272 4273
       </row>	
       <row>
4274
	<entry><literal>SP</literal> suffix</entry>
4275
	<entry>spell mode (not yet implemented)</entry>
4276
	<entry><literal>DDSP</literal></entry>
4277 4278 4279 4280 4281 4282
       </row>       
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
4283
    Usage notes for the date/time formatting:
4284 4285

    <itemizedlist>
4286 4287
     <listitem>
      <para>
4288
       <literal>FM</literal> suppresses leading zeroes and trailing blanks
4289 4290 4291 4292 4293
       that would otherwise be added to make the output of a pattern be
       fixed-width.
      </para>
     </listitem>

4294 4295 4296
     <listitem>
      <para>
       <function>to_timestamp</function> and <function>to_date</function>
4297
       skip multiple blank spaces in the input string if the <literal>FX</literal> option 
4298
       is not used. <literal>FX</literal> must be specified as the first item
4299 4300 4301 4302
       in the template.  For example 
       <literal>to_timestamp('2000&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;JUN', 'YYYY MON')</literal> is correct, but
       <literal>to_timestamp('2000&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;JUN', 'FXYYYY MON')</literal> returns an error,
       because <function>to_timestamp</function> expects one space only.
4303 4304 4305 4306 4307
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
4308
       Ordinary text is allowed in <function>to_char</function>
4309 4310
       templates and will be output literally.  You can put a substring
       in double quotes to force it to be interpreted as literal text
4311
       even if it contains pattern key words.  For example, in
4312
       <literal>'"Hello Year "YYYY'</literal>, the <literal>YYYY</literal>
4313
       will be replaced by the year data, but the single <literal>Y</literal> in <literal>Year</literal>
4314
       will not be.
4315 4316 4317 4318 4319
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
4320 4321 4322
       If you want to have a double quote in the output you must
       precede it with a backslash, for example <literal>'\\"YYYY
       Month\\"'</literal>. <!-- "" font-lock sanity :-) -->
4323 4324
       (Two backslashes are necessary because the backslash already
       has a special meaning in a string constant.)
4325 4326
      </para>
     </listitem>
4327 4328 4329

     <listitem>
      <para>
4330 4331
       The <literal>YYYY</literal> conversion from string to <type>timestamp</type> or
       <type>date</type> has a restriction if you use a year with more than 4 digits. You must
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4332
       use some non-digit character or template after <literal>YYYY</literal>,
4333
       otherwise the year is always interpreted as 4 digits. For example
4334
       (with the year 20000):
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4335
       <literal>to_date('200001131', 'YYYYMMDD')</literal> will be 
4336
       interpreted as a 4-digit year; instead use a non-digit 
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4337 4338 4339
       separator after the year, like
       <literal>to_date('20000-1131', 'YYYY-MMDD')</literal> or
       <literal>to_date('20000Nov31', 'YYYYMonDD')</literal>.
4340 4341
      </para>
     </listitem>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4342 4343 4344

     <listitem>
      <para>
4345 4346
       Millisecond (<literal>MS</literal>) and microsecond (<literal>US</literal>)
       values in a conversion from string to <type>timestamp</type> are used as part of the
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4347
       seconds after the decimal point. For example 
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4348
       <literal>to_timestamp('12:3', 'SS:MS')</literal> is not 3 milliseconds,
4349
       but 300, because the conversion counts it as 12 + 0.3 seconds.
4350 4351
       This means for the format <literal>SS:MS</literal>, the input values
       <literal>12:3</literal>, <literal>12:30</literal>, and <literal>12:300</literal> specify the
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4352
       same number of milliseconds. To get three milliseconds, one must use
4353
       <literal>12:003</literal>, which the conversion counts as
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4354 4355 4356 4357 4358
       12 + 0.003 = 12.003 seconds.
      </para>

      <para>
       Here is a more 
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4359
       complex example: 
4360
       <literal>to_timestamp('15:12:02.020.001230', 'HH:MI:SS.MS.US')</literal>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4361 4362
       is 15 hours, 12 minutes, and 2 seconds + 20 milliseconds +
       1230 microseconds = 2.021230 seconds. 
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4363 4364
      </para>
     </listitem>
4365
    </itemizedlist>
4366
   </para>
4367

4368 4369 4370 4371 4372 4373
  <para>
   <xref linkend="functions-formatting-numeric-table"> shows the
   template patterns available for formatting numeric values.
  </para>

    <table id="functions-formatting-numeric-table">
4374
     <title>Template Patterns for Numeric Formatting</title>
4375 4376 4377
     <tgroup cols="2">
      <thead>
       <row>
4378
	<entry>Pattern</entry>
4379 4380 4381 4382 4383
	<entry>Description</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
4384
	<entry><literal>9</literal></entry>
4385
	<entry>value with the specified number of digits</entry>
4386 4387
       </row>
       <row>
4388
	<entry><literal>0</literal></entry>
4389
	<entry>value with leading zeros</entry>
4390 4391
       </row>
       <row>
4392
	<entry><literal>.</literal> (period)</entry>
4393
	<entry>decimal point</entry>
4394 4395
       </row>       
       <row>
4396
	<entry><literal>,</literal> (comma)</entry>
4397
	<entry>group (thousand) separator</entry>
4398 4399
       </row>
       <row>
4400
	<entry><literal>PR</literal></entry>
4401
	<entry>negative value in angle brackets</entry>
4402 4403
       </row>
       <row>
4404
	<entry><literal>S</literal></entry>
4405
	<entry>sign anchored to number (uses locale)</entry>
4406 4407
       </row>
       <row>
4408
	<entry><literal>L</literal></entry>
4409
	<entry>currency symbol (uses locale)</entry>
4410 4411
       </row>
       <row>
4412
	<entry><literal>D</literal></entry>
4413
	<entry>decimal point (uses locale)</entry>
4414 4415
       </row>
       <row>
4416
	<entry><literal>G</literal></entry>
4417
	<entry>group separator (uses locale)</entry>
4418 4419
       </row>
       <row>
4420
	<entry><literal>MI</literal></entry>
4421
	<entry>minus sign in specified position (if number &lt; 0)</entry>
4422 4423
       </row>
       <row>
4424
	<entry><literal>PL</literal></entry>
4425
	<entry>plus sign in specified position (if number &gt; 0)</entry>
4426 4427
       </row>
       <row>
4428
	<entry><literal>SG</literal></entry>
4429
	<entry>plus/minus sign in specified position</entry>
4430 4431
       </row>
       <row>
4432
	<entry><literal>RN</literal></entry>
4433
	<entry>roman numeral (input between 1 and 3999)</entry>
4434 4435
       </row>
       <row>
4436
	<entry><literal>TH</literal> or <literal>th</literal></entry>
4437
	<entry>ordinal number suffix</entry>
4438 4439
       </row>
       <row>
4440
	<entry><literal>V</literal></entry>
4441
	<entry>shift specified number of digits (see notes)</entry>
4442 4443
       </row>
       <row>
4444
	<entry><literal>EEEE</literal></entry>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
4445
	<entry>scientific notation (not implemented yet)</entry>
4446 4447 4448 4449 4450 4451
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
4452
    Usage notes for the numeric formatting:
4453 4454 4455 4456

    <itemizedlist>
     <listitem>
      <para>
4457
       A sign formatted using <literal>SG</literal>, <literal>PL</literal>, or
4458
       <literal>MI</literal> is not anchored to
4459
       the number; for example,
4460 4461
       <literal>to_char(-12, 'S9999')</literal> produces <literal>'&nbsp;&nbsp;-12'</literal>,
       but <literal>to_char(-12, 'MI9999')</literal> produces <literal>'-&nbsp;&nbsp;12'</literal>.
4462 4463
       The Oracle implementation does not allow the use of
       <literal>MI</literal> ahead of <literal>9</literal>, but rather
4464
       requires that <literal>9</literal> precede
4465 4466 4467 4468 4469 4470
       <literal>MI</literal>.
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
4471
       <literal>9</literal> results in a value with the same number of 
4472
       digits as there are <literal>9</literal>s. If a digit is
4473
       not available it outputs a space.
4474 4475 4476 4477 4478
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
4479
       <literal>TH</literal> does not convert values less than zero
4480
       and does not convert fractional numbers.
4481 4482 4483 4484 4485
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
4486
       <literal>PL</literal>, <literal>SG</literal>, and
4487
       <literal>TH</literal> are <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
4488
       extensions. 
4489 4490 4491 4492 4493 4494 4495 4496 4497 4498 4499
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
       <literal>V</literal> effectively
       multiplies the input values by
       <literal>10^<replaceable>n</replaceable></literal>, where
       <replaceable>n</replaceable> is the number of digits following
       <literal>V</literal>. 
       <function>to_char</function> does not support the use of
4500 4501
       <literal>V</literal> combined with a decimal point.
       (E.g., <literal>99.9V99</literal> is not allowed.)
4502 4503 4504
      </para>
     </listitem>
    </itemizedlist>
4505
   </para>   
4506

4507 4508 4509 4510 4511 4512
  <para>
   <xref linkend="functions-formatting-examples-table"> shows some
   examples of the use of the <function>to_char</function> function.
  </para>

    <table id="functions-formatting-examples-table">
4513
     <title><function>to_char</function> Examples</title>
4514 4515 4516
     <tgroup cols="2">
      <thead>
       <row>
4517 4518
	<entry>Expression</entry>
	<entry>Result</entry>
4519 4520 4521 4522
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
4523 4524
        <entry><literal>to_char(current_timestamp, 'Day,&nbsp;DD&nbsp;&nbsp;HH12:MI:SS')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'Tuesday&nbsp;&nbsp;,&nbsp;06&nbsp;&nbsp;05:39:18'</literal></entry>
4525
       </row>
4526
       <row>
4527 4528
        <entry><literal>to_char(current_timestamp, 'FMDay,&nbsp;FMDD&nbsp;&nbsp;HH12:MI:SS')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'Tuesday,&nbsp;6&nbsp;&nbsp;05:39:18'</literal></entry>
4529 4530
       </row>          
       <row>
4531
        <entry><literal>to_char(-0.1, '99.99')</literal></entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4532
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;&nbsp;-.10'</literal></entry>
4533 4534
       </row>
       <row>
4535
        <entry><literal>to_char(-0.1, 'FM9.99')</literal></entry>
4536
        <entry><literal>'-.1'</literal></entry>
4537 4538
       </row>
       <row>
4539 4540
        <entry><literal>to_char(0.1, '0.9')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;0.1'</literal></entry>
4541 4542
       </row>
       <row>
4543 4544
        <entry><literal>to_char(12, '9990999.9')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0012.0'</literal></entry>
4545 4546
       </row>
       <row>
4547
        <entry><literal>to_char(12, 'FM9990999.9')</literal></entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4548
        <entry><literal>'0012.'</literal></entry>
4549 4550
       </row>
       <row>
4551 4552
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, '999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;485'</literal></entry>
4553 4554
       </row>
       <row>
4555
        <entry><literal>to_char(-485, '999')</literal></entry>
4556
        <entry><literal>'-485'</literal></entry>
4557 4558
       </row>
       <row>
4559 4560
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, '9&nbsp;9&nbsp;9')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;4&nbsp;8&nbsp;5'</literal></entry>
4561 4562
       </row>
       <row>
4563 4564
        <entry><literal>to_char(1485, '9,999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;1,485'</literal></entry>
4565 4566
       </row>
       <row>
4567 4568
        <entry><literal>to_char(1485, '9G999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;1&nbsp;485'</literal></entry>
4569 4570
       </row>
       <row>
4571
        <entry><literal>to_char(148.5, '999.999')</literal></entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4572
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;148.500'</literal></entry>
4573
       </row>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4574 4575 4576 4577 4578 4579 4580 4581
       <row>
        <entry><literal>to_char(148.5, 'FM999.999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'148.5'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
        <entry><literal>to_char(148.5, 'FM999.990')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'148.500'</literal></entry>
       </row>
4582
       <row>
4583 4584
        <entry><literal>to_char(148.5, '999D999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;148,500'</literal></entry>	 
4585 4586
       </row>
       <row>
4587 4588
        <entry><literal>to_char(3148.5, '9G999D999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;3&nbsp;148,500'</literal></entry>
4589 4590
       </row>
       <row>
4591
        <entry><literal>to_char(-485, '999S')</literal></entry>
4592
        <entry><literal>'485-'</literal></entry>
4593 4594
       </row>
       <row>		
4595
        <entry><literal>to_char(-485, '999MI')</literal></entry>
4596
        <entry><literal>'485-'</literal></entry>	
4597 4598
       </row>
       <row>
4599
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, '999MI')</literal></entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
4600 4601 4602 4603
        <entry><literal>'485&nbsp;'</literal></entry>		
       </row>
       <row>
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, 'FM999MI')</literal></entry>
4604
        <entry><literal>'485'</literal></entry>		
4605 4606
       </row>
       <row>
4607
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, 'PL999')</literal></entry>
4608
        <entry><literal>'+485'</literal></entry>	
4609 4610
       </row>
       <row>		
4611
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, 'SG999')</literal></entry>
4612
        <entry><literal>'+485'</literal></entry>	
4613 4614
       </row>
       <row>
4615
        <entry><literal>to_char(-485, 'SG999')</literal></entry>
4616
        <entry><literal>'-485'</literal></entry>	
4617 4618
       </row>
       <row>
4619
        <entry><literal>to_char(-485, '9SG99')</literal></entry>
4620
        <entry><literal>'4-85'</literal></entry>	
4621 4622
       </row>
       <row>
4623
        <entry><literal>to_char(-485, '999PR')</literal></entry>
4624
        <entry><literal>'&lt;485&gt;'</literal></entry>		
4625 4626
       </row>
       <row>
4627 4628
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, 'L999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'DM&nbsp;485</literal></entry>	 
4629 4630
       </row>
       <row>
4631 4632
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, 'RN')</literal></entry>		
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CDLXXXV'</literal></entry>
4633 4634
       </row>
       <row>
4635
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, 'FMRN')</literal></entry>	
4636
        <entry><literal>'CDLXXXV'</literal></entry>
4637 4638
       </row>
       <row>
4639 4640
        <entry><literal>to_char(5.2, 'FMRN')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'V'</literal></entry>		
4641 4642
       </row>
       <row>
4643 4644
        <entry><literal>to_char(482, '999th')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;482nd'</literal></entry>				
4645 4646
       </row>
       <row>
4647 4648
        <entry><literal>to_char(485, '"Good&nbsp;number:"999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'Good&nbsp;number:&nbsp;485'</literal></entry>
4649 4650
       </row>
       <row>
4651 4652
        <entry><literal>to_char(485.8, '"Pre:"999"&nbsp;Post:"&nbsp;.999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'Pre:&nbsp;485&nbsp;Post:&nbsp;.800'</literal></entry>
4653 4654
       </row>
       <row>
4655 4656
        <entry><literal>to_char(12, '99V999')</literal></entry>		
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;12000'</literal></entry>
4657 4658
       </row>
       <row>
4659 4660
        <entry><literal>to_char(12.4, '99V999')</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;12400'</literal></entry>
4661 4662
       </row>
       <row>		
4663
        <entry><literal>to_char(12.45, '99V9')</literal></entry>
4664
        <entry><literal>'&nbsp;125'</literal></entry>
4665 4666 4667 4668
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>
4669

4670 4671 4672
  </sect1>


4673
  <sect1 id="functions-datetime">
4674
   <title>Date/Time Functions and Operators</title>
4675

4676 4677 4678 4679 4680 4681 4682 4683
  <para>
   <xref linkend="functions-datetime-table"> shows the available
   functions for date/time value processing, with details appearing in
   the following subsections.  <xref
   linkend="operators-datetime-table"> illustrates the behaviors of
   the basic arithmetic operators (<literal>+</literal>,
   <literal>*</literal>, etc.).  For formatting functions, refer to
   <xref linkend="functions-formatting">.  You should be familiar with
4684 4685
   the background information on date/time data types from <xref
   linkend="datatype-datetime">.
4686 4687 4688
  </para>

  <para>
4689 4690 4691
   All the functions and operators described below that take <type>time</type> or <type>timestamp</type>
   inputs actually come in two variants: one that takes <type>time with time zone</type> or <type>timestamp
   with time zone</type>, and one that takes <type>time without time zone</type> or <type>timestamp without time zone</type>.
4692 4693 4694 4695
   For brevity, these variants are not shown separately.  Also, the
   <literal>+</> and <literal>*</> operators come in commutative pairs (for
   example both date + integer and integer + date); we show only one of each
   such pair.
4696
  </para>
4697 4698 4699 4700

    <table id="operators-datetime-table">
     <title>Date/Time Operators</title>

4701
     <tgroup cols="3">
4702 4703
      <thead>
       <row>
4704
        <entry>Operator</entry>
4705 4706 4707 4708 4709 4710 4711
        <entry>Example</entry>
        <entry>Result</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
4712
        <entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
4713 4714
        <entry><literal>date '2001-09-28' + integer '7'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>date '2001-10-05'</literal></entry>
4715 4716 4717
       </row>

       <row>
4718
        <entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
4719 4720
        <entry><literal>date '2001-09-28' + interval '1 hour'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-28 01:00'</literal></entry>
4721 4722
       </row>

4723 4724 4725 4726 4727 4728 4729 4730 4731 4732 4733 4734 4735 4736 4737 4738 4739 4740
       <row>
        <entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>date '2001-09-28' + time '03:00'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-28 03:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '1 day' + interval '1 hour'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '1 day 01:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-28 01:00' + interval '23 hours'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-29 00:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

4741
       <row>
4742
        <entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
4743 4744
        <entry><literal>time '01:00' + interval '3 hours'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>time '04:00'</literal></entry>
4745 4746 4747
       </row>

       <row>
4748
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
4749 4750 4751 4752 4753 4754 4755 4756 4757 4758 4759 4760 4761 4762
        <entry><literal>- interval '23 hours'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '-23:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>date '2001-10-01' - date '2001-09-28'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>integer '3'</literal></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>date '2001-10-01' - integer '7'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>date '2001-09-24'</literal></entry>
4763 4764 4765
       </row>

       <row>
4766
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
4767 4768
        <entry><literal>date '2001-09-28' - interval '1 hour'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-27 23:00'</literal></entry>
4769 4770
       </row>

4771 4772 4773 4774 4775 4776
       <row>
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>time '05:00' - time '03:00'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '02:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

4777
       <row>
4778
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
4779 4780
        <entry><literal>time '05:00' - interval '2 hours'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>time '03:00'</literal></entry>
4781 4782
       </row>

4783 4784 4785 4786 4787 4788 4789 4790 4791 4792 4793 4794 4795 4796 4797 4798 4799 4800
       <row>
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-28 23:00' - interval '23 hours'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-28 00:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '1 day' - interval '1 hour'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '23:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
        <entry><literal>timestamp '2001-09-29 03:00' - timestamp '2001-09-27 12:00'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '1 day 15:00'</literal></entry>
       </row>

4801 4802
       <row>
        <entry> <literal>*</literal> </entry>
4803 4804
        <entry><literal>interval '1 hour' * double precision '3.5'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '03:30'</literal></entry>
4805 4806 4807 4808
       </row>

       <row>
        <entry> <literal>/</literal> </entry>
4809 4810
        <entry><literal>interval '1 hour' / double precision '1.5'</literal></entry>
        <entry><literal>interval '00:40'</literal></entry>
4811 4812 4813 4814 4815
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

4816
    <table id="functions-datetime-table">
4817
     <title>Date/Time Functions</title>
4818
     <tgroup cols="5">
4819 4820
      <thead>
       <row>
4821
	<entry>Function</entry>
4822
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
4823 4824
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
4825
	<entry>Result</entry>
4826 4827
       </row>
      </thead>
4828

4829 4830
      <tbody>
       <row>
4831
	<entry><literal><function>age</function>(<type>timestamp</type>)</literal></entry>
4832
	<entry><type>interval</type></entry>
4833
	<entry>Subtract from today</entry>
4834 4835
	<entry><literal>age(timestamp '1957-06-13')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>43 years 8 mons 3 days</literal></entry>
4836
       </row>
4837

4838
       <row>
4839
	<entry><literal><function>age</function>(<type>timestamp</type>, <type>timestamp</type>)</literal></entry>
4840
	<entry><type>interval</type></entry>
4841
	<entry>Subtract arguments</entry>
4842 4843
	<entry><literal>age('2001-04-10', timestamp '1957-06-13')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>43 years 9 mons 27 days</literal></entry>
4844 4845 4846
       </row>

       <row>
4847
	<entry><literal><function>current_date</function></literal></entry>
4848
	<entry><type>date</type></entry>
4849
	<entry>Today's date; see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-current">
4850 4851 4852
	</entry>
	<entry></entry>
	<entry></entry>
4853
       </row>
4854 4855

       <row>
4856
        <entry><literal><function>current_time</function></literal></entry>
4857
        <entry><type>time with time zone</type></entry>
4858
        <entry>Time of day; see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-current">
4859 4860 4861
        </entry>
        <entry></entry>
        <entry></entry>
4862 4863
       </row>

4864
       <row>
4865
	<entry><literal><function>current_timestamp</function></literal></entry>
4866
	<entry><type>timestamp with time zone</type></entry>
4867
	<entry>Date and time; see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-current">
4868 4869 4870 4871 4872 4873
	</entry>
	<entry></entry>
	<entry></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
4874
	<entry><literal><function>date_part</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>timestamp</type>)</literal></entry>
4875
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
4876
	<entry>Get subfield (equivalent to
4877
	 <function>extract</function>); see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-extract">
4878
        </entry>
4879 4880
	<entry><literal>date_part('hour', timestamp '2001-02-16 20:38:40')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>20</literal></entry>
4881
       </row>
4882

4883
       <row>
4884
	<entry><literal><function>date_part</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>interval</type>)</literal></entry>
4885
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
4886
	<entry>Get subfield (equivalent to
4887
	 <function>extract</function>); see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-extract">
4888
        </entry>
4889 4890
	<entry><literal>date_part('month', interval '2 years 3 months')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>3</literal></entry>
4891
       </row>
4892

4893
       <row>
4894
	<entry><literal><function>date_trunc</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>timestamp</type>)</literal></entry>
4895
	<entry><type>timestamp</type></entry>
4896 4897
	<entry>Truncate to specified precision; see also <xref
                                                        linkend="functions-datetime-trunc">
4898
        </entry>
4899
	<entry><literal>date_trunc('hour', timestamp '2001-02-16 20:38:40')</literal></entry>
4900
	<entry><literal>2001-02-16 20:00:00</literal></entry>
4901
       </row>
4902

4903
       <row>
4904 4905
	<entry><literal><function>extract</function>(<parameter>field</parameter> from
         <type>timestamp</type>)</literal></entry>
4906
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
4907
	<entry>Get subfield; see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-extract">
4908
        </entry>
4909 4910
	<entry><literal>extract(hour from timestamp '2001-02-16 20:38:40')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>20</literal></entry>
4911
       </row>
4912 4913

       <row>
4914 4915
	<entry><literal><function>extract</function>(<parameter>field</parameter> from
         <type>interval</type>)</literal></entry>
4916
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
4917
	<entry>Get subfield; see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-extract">
4918
        </entry>
4919 4920
	<entry><literal>extract(month from interval '2 years 3 months')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>3</literal></entry>
4921 4922
       </row>

4923
       <row>
4924
	<entry><literal><function>isfinite</function>(<type>timestamp</type>)</literal></entry>
4925
	<entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
4926
	<entry>Test for finite time stamp (not equal to infinity)</entry>
4927 4928
	<entry><literal>isfinite(timestamp '2001-02-16 21:28:30')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>true</literal></entry>
4929
       </row>
4930

4931
       <row>
4932
	<entry><literal><function>isfinite</function>(<type>interval</type>)</literal></entry>
4933
	<entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
4934
	<entry>Test for finite interval</entry>
4935 4936
	<entry><literal>isfinite(interval '4 hours')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>true</literal></entry>
4937
       </row>
4938

4939
       <row>
4940
        <entry><literal><function>localtime</function></literal></entry>
4941
        <entry><type>time</type></entry>
4942
        <entry>Time of day; see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-current">
4943 4944 4945 4946 4947 4948
        </entry>
        <entry></entry>
        <entry></entry>
       </row>

       <row>
4949
        <entry><literal><function>localtimestamp</function></literal></entry>
4950
        <entry><type>timestamp</type></entry>
4951
        <entry>Date and time; see <xref linkend="functions-datetime-current">
4952 4953 4954 4955 4956
        </entry>
        <entry></entry>
        <entry></entry>
       </row>

4957
       <row>
4958
	<entry><literal><function>now</function>()</literal></entry>
4959
	<entry><type>timestamp with time zone</type></entry>
4960
	<entry>Current date and time (equivalent to
4961 4962
	 <function>current_timestamp</function>); see <xref
                                                     linkend="functions-datetime-current">
4963 4964 4965
	</entry>
	<entry></entry>
	<entry></entry>
4966
       </row>
4967

4968
       <row>
4969
	<entry><literal><function>timeofday()</function></literal></entry>
4970
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
4971 4972
	<entry>Current date and time; see <xref
                                         linkend="functions-datetime-current">
4973
	</entry>
4974 4975
	<entry></entry>
	<entry></entry>
4976 4977
       </row>

4978 4979 4980
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>
4981

4982
   <para>
4983
    In addition to these functions, the SQL <literal>OVERLAPS</> operator is
4984 4985 4986 4987 4988 4989 4990
    supported:
<synopsis>
( <replaceable>start1</replaceable>, <replaceable>end1</replaceable> ) OVERLAPS ( <replaceable>start2</replaceable>, <replaceable>end2</replaceable> )
( <replaceable>start1</replaceable>, <replaceable>length1</replaceable> ) OVERLAPS ( <replaceable>start2</replaceable>, <replaceable>length2</replaceable> )
</synopsis>
    This expression yields true when two time periods (defined by their
    endpoints) overlap, false when they do not overlap.  The endpoints
4991 4992
    can be specified as pairs of dates, times, or time stamps; or as
    a date, time, or time stamp followed by an interval.
4993 4994 4995 4996 4997 4998 4999 5000 5001 5002 5003
   </para>

<screen>
SELECT (DATE '2001-02-16', DATE '2001-12-21') OVERLAPS
       (DATE '2001-10-30', DATE '2002-10-30');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>true</computeroutput>
SELECT (DATE '2001-02-16', INTERVAL '100 days') OVERLAPS
       (DATE '2001-10-30', DATE '2002-10-30');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>false</computeroutput>
</screen>

5004 5005 5006 5007 5008 5009 5010 5011
  <sect2 id="functions-datetime-extract">
   <title><function>EXTRACT</function>, <function>date_part</function></title>

<synopsis>
EXTRACT (<replaceable>field</replaceable> FROM <replaceable>source</replaceable>)
</synopsis>

   <para>
5012
    The <function>extract</function> function retrieves subfields
5013 5014 5015 5016 5017
    from date/time values, such as year or hour.
    <replaceable>source</replaceable> is a value expression that
    evaluates to type <type>timestamp</type> or <type>interval</type>.
    (Expressions of type <type>date</type> or <type>time</type> will
    be cast to <type>timestamp</type> and can therefore be used as
5018 5019
    well.)  <replaceable>field</replaceable> is an identifier or
    string that selects what field to extract from the source value.
5020 5021
    The <function>extract</function> function returns values of type
    <type>double precision</type>.
5022
    The following are valid field names:
5023 5024 5025 5026

    <!-- alphabetical -->
    <variablelist>
     <varlistentry>
5027
      <term><literal>century</literal></term>
5028 5029
      <listitem>
       <para>
5030
        The historical definition of a century.
5031 5032 5033
       </para>

<screen>
5034
SELECT EXTRACT(CENTURY FROM TIMESTAMP '2000-12-16 12:21:13');
5035
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>20</computeroutput>
5036 5037
SELECT EXTRACT(CENTURY FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>21</computeroutput>
5038 5039 5040
</screen>

       <para>
5041 5042 5043 5044 5045 5046 5047 5048 5049 5050 5051 5052 5053 5054
        An historical century is a period of 100 years.
	The first century starts at 0001-01-01 00:00:00 AD, although
	they did not know at the time. This definition applies to all
	Gregorian calendar countries. There is no number 0 century, 
	you go from -1 to 1.

	If you disagree with this, please write your complaint to:
	Pope, Cathedral Saint-Peter of Roma, Vatican.
       </para>

       <para>
	Compatibility: if you want the previous postgres version of century,
	just divide the year by 100. Note that with this definition, 
	century number 0 lasts 200 years.
5055 5056 5057 5058 5059
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5060
      <term><literal>day</literal></term>
5061 5062 5063 5064 5065 5066 5067 5068 5069 5070 5071 5072 5073
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The day (of the month) field (1 - 31)
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(DAY FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>16</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5074
      <term><literal>decade</literal></term>
5075 5076 5077 5078 5079 5080 5081 5082 5083 5084 5085 5086 5087
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The year field divided by 10
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(DECADE FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>200</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5088
      <term><literal>dow</literal></term>
5089 5090 5091 5092 5093 5094 5095 5096 5097 5098 5099 5100 5101 5102
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The day of the week (0 - 6; Sunday is 0) (for
        <type>timestamp</type> values only)
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(DOW FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>5</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5103
      <term><literal>doy</literal></term>
5104 5105 5106 5107
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The day of the year (1 - 365/366) (for <type>timestamp</type> values only)
       </para>
5108

5109 5110 5111 5112 5113 5114 5115 5116
<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(DOY FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>47</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5117
      <term><literal>epoch</literal></term>
5118 5119 5120
      <listitem>
       <para>
        For <type>date</type> and <type>timestamp</type> values, the
5121 5122
        number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00-00 (can be negative);
	for <type>interval</type> values, the total number
5123 5124 5125 5126
        of seconds in the interval
       </para>

<screen>
5127 5128
SELECT EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE '2001-02-16 20:38:40-08');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>982384720</computeroutput>
5129 5130 5131

SELECT EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM INTERVAL '5 days 3 hours');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>442800</computeroutput>
5132 5133 5134 5135 5136 5137 5138 5139 5140
</screen>

       <para>
        Here is how you can convert an epoch value back to a time
        stamp:
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE 'epoch' + 982384720 * interval '1 second';
5141 5142 5143 5144 5145
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5146
      <term><literal>hour</literal></term>
5147 5148 5149 5150 5151 5152 5153 5154 5155 5156 5157 5158 5159
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The hour field (0 - 23)
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(HOUR FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>20</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5160
      <term><literal>microseconds</literal></term>
5161 5162 5163 5164 5165 5166 5167 5168 5169 5170 5171 5172 5173 5174
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The seconds field, including fractional parts, multiplied by 1
        000 000.  Note that this includes full seconds.
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(MICROSECONDS FROM TIME '17:12:28.5');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>28500000</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5175
      <term><literal>millennium</literal></term>
5176 5177
      <listitem>
       <para>
5178
        The conventional historical millennium.
5179 5180 5181 5182
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(MILLENNIUM FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
5183
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>3</computeroutput>
5184 5185 5186
</screen>

       <para>
5187 5188
        Years in the 1900's are in the second millennium.
	The third millennium starts January 1, 2001.
5189 5190 5191 5192 5193
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5194
      <term><literal>milliseconds</literal></term>
5195 5196 5197 5198 5199 5200 5201 5202 5203 5204 5205 5206 5207 5208
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The seconds field, including fractional parts, multiplied by
        1000.  Note that this includes full seconds.
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(MILLISECONDS FROM TIME '17:12:28.5');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>28500</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5209
      <term><literal>minute</literal></term>
5210 5211 5212 5213 5214 5215 5216 5217 5218 5219 5220 5221 5222
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The minutes field (0 - 59)
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>38</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5223
      <term><literal>month</literal></term>
5224 5225 5226 5227 5228 5229 5230 5231 5232 5233 5234 5235 5236 5237 5238 5239 5240 5241 5242 5243 5244
      <listitem>
       <para>
        For <type>timestamp</type> values, the number of the month
        within the year (1 - 12) ; for <type>interval</type> values
        the number of months, modulo 12 (0 - 11)
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(MONTH FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2</computeroutput>

SELECT EXTRACT(MONTH FROM INTERVAL '2 years 3 months');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>3</computeroutput>

SELECT EXTRACT(MONTH FROM INTERVAL '2 years 13 months');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>1</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5245
      <term><literal>quarter</literal></term>
5246 5247 5248 5249 5250 5251 5252 5253 5254 5255 5256 5257 5258 5259
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The quarter of the year (1 - 4) that the day is in (for
        <type>timestamp</type> values only)
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(QUARTER FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>1</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5260
      <term><literal>second</literal></term>
5261 5262 5263 5264 5265 5266 5267 5268 5269 5270 5271 5272 5273 5274 5275 5276
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The seconds field, including fractional parts (0 -
        59<footnote><simpara>60 if leap seconds are
        implemented by the operating system</simpara></footnote>)
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(SECOND FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>40</computeroutput>

SELECT EXTRACT(SECOND FROM TIME '17:12:28.5');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>28.5</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>
5277 5278 5279 5280
     <varlistentry>
      <term><literal>timezone</literal></term>
      <listitem>
       <para>
5281 5282 5283
        The time zone offset from UTC, measured in seconds.  Positive values
	correspond to time zones east of UTC, negative values to
	zones west of UTC.
5284 5285 5286 5287 5288 5289 5290 5291
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
      <term><literal>timezone_hour</literal></term>
      <listitem>
       <para>
5292
        The hour component of the time zone offset
5293 5294 5295 5296 5297 5298 5299 5300
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
      <term><literal>timezone_minute</literal></term>
      <listitem>
       <para>
5301
        The minute component of the time zone offset
5302 5303 5304
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>
5305 5306

     <varlistentry>
5307
      <term><literal>week</literal></term>
5308 5309
      <listitem>
       <para>
5310
        The number of the week of the year that the day is in.  By definition
5311
        (<acronym>ISO</acronym> 8601), the first week of a year
5312
        contains January 4 of that year.  (The <acronym>ISO</acronym>-8601
5313
        week starts on Monday.)  In other words, the first Thursday of
5314
        a year is in week 1 of that year. (for <type>timestamp</type> values only)
5315 5316 5317 5318 5319 5320 5321 5322 5323 5324
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(WEEK FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>7</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
5325
      <term><literal>year</literal></term>
5326 5327
      <listitem>
       <para>
5328 5329
        The year field.  Keep in mind there is no <literal>0 AD</>, so subtracting 
        <literal>BC</> years from <literal>AD</> years should be done with care.
5330 5331 5332 5333 5334 5335 5336 5337 5338 5339 5340
       </para>

<screen>
SELECT EXTRACT(YEAR FROM TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001</computeroutput>
</screen>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

    </variablelist>

5341 5342 5343
   </para>

   <para>
5344 5345 5346
    The <function>extract</function> function is primarily intended
    for computational processing.  For formatting date/time values for
    display, see <xref linkend="functions-formatting">.
5347
   </para>
5348 5349

   <para>
5350 5351
    The <function>date_part</function> function is modeled on the traditional
    <productname>Ingres</productname> equivalent to the
5352
    <acronym>SQL</acronym>-standard function <function>extract</function>:
5353 5354 5355
<synopsis>
date_part('<replaceable>field</replaceable>', <replaceable>source</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
5356
    Note that here the <replaceable>field</replaceable> parameter needs to
5357
    be a string value, not a name.  The valid field names for
5358 5359 5360 5361 5362 5363 5364 5365
    <function>date_part</function> are the same as for
    <function>extract</function>.
   </para>

<screen>
SELECT date_part('day', TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>16</computeroutput>

T
Tatsuo Ishii 已提交
5366
SELECT date_part('hour', INTERVAL '4 hours 3 minutes');
5367 5368 5369 5370 5371 5372 5373 5374 5375 5376 5377 5378 5379 5380 5381 5382 5383 5384
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>4</computeroutput>
</screen>

  </sect2>

  <sect2 id="functions-datetime-trunc">
   <title><function>date_trunc</function></title>

   <para>
    The function <function>date_trunc</function> is conceptually
    similar to the <function>trunc</function> function for numbers.
   </para>

   <para>
<synopsis>
date_trunc('<replaceable>field</replaceable>', <replaceable>source</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
    <replaceable>source</replaceable> is a value expression of type
5385 5386 5387 5388
    <type>timestamp</type> or <type>interval</>.
    (Values of type <type>date</type> and
    <type>time</type> are cast automatically, to <type>timestamp</type> or
    <type>interval</> respectively.)
5389
    <replaceable>field</replaceable> selects to which precision to
5390 5391 5392
    truncate the input value.  The return value is of type
    <type>timestamp</type> or <type>interval</>
    with all fields that are less significant than the
5393 5394 5395 5396 5397 5398
    selected one set to zero (or one, for day and month).
   </para>

   <para>
    Valid values for <replaceable>field</replaceable> are:
    <simplelist>
5399 5400 5401 5402 5403 5404
     <member><literal>microseconds</literal></member>
     <member><literal>milliseconds</literal></member>
     <member><literal>second</literal></member>
     <member><literal>minute</literal></member>
     <member><literal>hour</literal></member>
     <member><literal>day</literal></member>
5405
     <member><literal>week</literal></member>
5406 5407 5408 5409 5410
     <member><literal>month</literal></member>
     <member><literal>year</literal></member>
     <member><literal>decade</literal></member>
     <member><literal>century</literal></member>
     <member><literal>millennium</literal></member>
5411 5412 5413
    </simplelist>
   </para>

5414 5415
   <para>
    Examples:
5416 5417
<screen>
SELECT date_trunc('hour', TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
5418
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-02-16 20:00:00</computeroutput>
5419 5420

SELECT date_trunc('year', TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40');
5421
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-01-01 00:00:00</computeroutput>
5422
</screen>
5423
   </para>
5424 5425
  </sect2>

5426
  <sect2 id="functions-datetime-zoneconvert">
5427
   <title><literal>AT TIME ZONE</literal></title>
5428 5429

   <indexterm>
5430
    <primary>time zone</primary>
5431 5432 5433 5434
    <secondary>conversion</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <para>
5435 5436 5437 5438
    The <literal>AT TIME ZONE</literal> construct allows conversions
    of time stamps to different time zones.  <xref
    linkend="functions-datetime-zoneconvert-table"> shows its
    variants.
5439 5440 5441
   </para>

    <table id="functions-datetime-zoneconvert-table">
5442
     <title><literal>AT TIME ZONE</literal> Variants</title>
5443 5444 5445 5446
     <tgroup cols="3">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Expression</entry>
5447
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
5448 5449 5450 5451 5452 5453 5454
	<entry>Description</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>

      <tbody>
       <row>
	<entry>
5455
	 <literal><type>timestamp without time zone</type> AT TIME ZONE <replaceable>zone</></literal>
5456 5457
	</entry>
	<entry><type>timestamp with time zone</type></entry>
5458
	<entry>Convert local time in given time zone to UTC</entry>
5459 5460 5461 5462
       </row>

       <row>
	<entry>
5463
	 <literal><type>timestamp with time zone</type> AT TIME ZONE <replaceable>zone</></literal>
5464 5465
	</entry>
	<entry><type>timestamp without time zone</type></entry>
5466
	<entry>Convert UTC to local time in given time zone</entry>
5467 5468 5469 5470
       </row>

       <row>
	<entry>
5471
	 <literal><type>time with time zone</type> AT TIME ZONE <replaceable>zone</></literal>
5472 5473
	</entry>
	<entry><type>time with time zone</type></entry>
5474
	<entry>Convert local time across time zones</entry>
5475 5476 5477 5478 5479 5480
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

   <para>
5481
    In these expressions, the desired time zone <replaceable>zone</> can be
5482 5483 5484 5485 5486
    specified either as a text string (e.g., <literal>'PST'</literal>)
    or as an interval (e.g., <literal>INTERVAL '-08:00'</literal>).
   </para>

   <para>
5487
    Examples (supposing that the local time zone is <literal>PST8PDT</>):
5488 5489 5490 5491 5492 5493 5494
<screen>
SELECT TIMESTAMP '2001-02-16 20:38:40' AT TIME ZONE 'MST';
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-02-16 19:38:40-08</computeroutput>

SELECT TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE '2001-02-16 20:38:40-05' AT TIME ZONE 'MST';
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-02-16 18:38:40</computeroutput>
</screen>
5495 5496 5497 5498
    The first example takes a zone-less time stamp and interprets it as MST time
    (UTC-7) to produce a UTC time stamp, which is then rotated to PST (UTC-8)
    for display.  The second example takes a time stamp specified in EST
    (UTC-5) and converts it to local time in MST (UTC-7).
5499 5500 5501
   </para>

   <para>
5502 5503 5504 5505
    The function <literal><function>timezone</function>(<replaceable>zone</>,
    <replaceable>timestamp</>)</literal> is equivalent to the SQL-conforming construct
    <literal><replaceable>timestamp</> AT TIME ZONE
    <replaceable>zone</></literal>. 
5506 5507 5508
   </para>
  </sect2>

5509 5510 5511
  <sect2 id="functions-datetime-current">
   <title>Current Date/Time</title>

5512 5513 5514 5515 5516 5517 5518 5519 5520 5521
   <indexterm>
    <primary>date</primary>
    <secondary>current</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>time</primary>
    <secondary>current</secondary>
   </indexterm>

5522
   <para>
5523 5524
    The following functions are available to obtain the current date and/or
    time:
5525
<synopsis>
5526
CURRENT_DATE
5527
CURRENT_TIME
5528
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
5529 5530
CURRENT_TIME ( <replaceable>precision</replaceable> )
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ( <replaceable>precision</replaceable> )
5531 5532 5533 5534
LOCALTIME
LOCALTIMESTAMP
LOCALTIME ( <replaceable>precision</replaceable> )
LOCALTIMESTAMP ( <replaceable>precision</replaceable> )
5535
</synopsis>
5536 5537 5538 5539 5540 5541 5542 5543 5544 5545
    </para>

    <para>
     <function>CURRENT_TIME</function> and
     <function>CURRENT_TIMESTAMP</function> deliver values with time zone;
     <function>LOCALTIME</function> and
     <function>LOCALTIMESTAMP</function> deliver values without time zone.
    </para>

    <para>
5546 5547 5548 5549 5550 5551
     <function>CURRENT_TIME</function>,
     <function>CURRENT_TIMESTAMP</function>,
     <function>LOCALTIME</function>, and
     <function>LOCALTIMESTAMP</function>
     can optionally be given
     a precision parameter, which causes the result to be rounded
5552
     to that many fractional digits in the seconds field.  Without a precision parameter,
5553
     the result is given to the full available precision.
5554 5555
    </para>

5556 5557 5558 5559 5560 5561 5562
    <note>
     <para>
      Prior to <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 7.2, the precision
      parameters were unimplemented, and the result was always given
      in integer seconds.
     </para>
    </note>
5563

5564 5565 5566
   <para>
    Some examples:
<screen>
5567
SELECT CURRENT_TIME;
5568
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>14:39:53.662522-05</computeroutput>
5569 5570

SELECT CURRENT_DATE;
5571
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-12-23</computeroutput>
5572 5573

SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP;
5574
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-12-23 14:39:53.662522-05</computeroutput>
5575 5576

SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP(2);
5577
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-12-23 14:39:53.66-05</computeroutput>
5578 5579

SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP;
5580
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>2001-12-23 14:39:53.662522</computeroutput>
5581
</screen>
5582
   </para>
5583 5584 5585

   <para>
    The function <function>now()</function> is the traditional
5586
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> equivalent to
5587
    <function>CURRENT_TIMESTAMP</function>.
5588 5589 5590
   </para>

   <para>
5591
    There is also the function <function>timeofday()</function>, which for historical
5592
    reasons returns a <type>text</type> string rather than a <type>timestamp</type> value:
5593 5594
<screen>
SELECT timeofday();
5595
<lineannotation>Result: </lineannotation><computeroutput>Sat Feb 17 19:07:32.000126 2001 EST</computeroutput>
5596
</screen>
5597
   </para>
5598 5599

   <para>
5600
    It is important to know that
5601 5602
    <function>CURRENT_TIMESTAMP</function> and related functions return
    the start time of the current transaction; their values do not
5603 5604 5605 5606
    change during the transaction. This is considered a feature:
    the intent is to allow a single transaction to have a consistent
    notion of the <quote>current</quote> time, so that multiple
    modifications within the same transaction bear the same
5607
    time stamp. <function>timeofday()</function>
5608
    returns the wall-clock time and does advance during transactions.
5609 5610
   </para>

B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
5611
   <note>
5612 5613
    <para>
     Other database systems may advance these values more
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
5614 5615
     frequently.
    </para>
5616 5617
   </note>

5618
   <para>
5619
    All the date/time data types also accept the special literal value
5620
    <literal>now</literal> to specify the current date and time.  Thus,
5621
    the following three all return the same result:
5622 5623 5624 5625 5626
<programlisting>
SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP;
SELECT now();
SELECT TIMESTAMP 'now';
</programlisting>
5627 5628
   </para>

5629 5630
    <note>
     <para>
5631 5632
      You do not want to use the third form when specifying a <literal>DEFAULT</>
      clause while creating a table.  The system will convert <literal>now</literal>
5633
      to a <type>timestamp</type> as soon as the constant is parsed, so that when
5634
      the default value is needed,
5635 5636
      the time of the table creation would be used!  The first two
      forms will not be evaluated until the default value is used,
5637 5638
      because they are function calls.  Thus they will give the desired
      behavior of defaulting to the time of row insertion.
5639 5640 5641 5642
     </para>
    </note>
  </sect2>
 </sect1>
5643 5644 5645

  
 <sect1 id="functions-geometry">
5646
  <title>Geometric Functions and Operators</title>
5647 5648

   <para>
5649 5650 5651
    The geometric types <type>point</type>, <type>box</type>,
    <type>lseg</type>, <type>line</type>, <type>path</type>,
    <type>polygon</type>, and <type>circle</type> have a large set of
5652 5653 5654 5655
    native support functions and operators, shown in <xref
    linkend="functions-geometry-op-table">, <xref
    linkend="functions-geometry-func-table">, and <xref
    linkend="functions-geometry-conv-table">.
5656 5657
   </para>

5658
   <table id="functions-geometry-op-table">
5659 5660 5661 5662 5663 5664
     <title>Geometric Operators</title>
     <tgroup cols="3">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Operator</entry>
	<entry>Description</entry>
5665
	<entry>Example</entry>
5666 5667 5668 5669
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
5670
	<entry> <literal>+</literal> </entry>
5671 5672 5673 5674
	<entry>Translation</entry>
	<entry><literal>box '((0,0),(1,1))' + point '(2.0,0)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5675
	<entry> <literal>-</literal> </entry>
5676 5677 5678 5679
	<entry>Translation</entry>
	<entry><literal>box '((0,0),(1,1))' - point '(2.0,0)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5680
	<entry> <literal>*</literal> </entry>
5681 5682 5683 5684
	<entry>Scaling/rotation</entry>
	<entry><literal>box '((0,0),(1,1))' * point '(2.0,0)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5685
	<entry> <literal>/</literal> </entry>
5686 5687 5688 5689
	<entry>Scaling/rotation</entry>
	<entry><literal>box '((0,0),(2,2))' / point '(2.0,0)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5690 5691
	<entry> <literal>#</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Point or box of intersection</entry>
5692 5693 5694
	<entry><literal>'((1,-1),(-1,1))' # '((1,1),(-1,-1))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5695
	<entry> <literal>#</literal> </entry>
5696
	<entry>Number of points in path or polygon</entry>
5697 5698
	<entry><literal># '((1,0),(0,1),(-1,0))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5699
       <row>
5700
	<entry> <literal>@-@</literal> </entry>
5701 5702 5703 5704
	<entry>Length or circumference</entry>
	<entry><literal>@-@ path '((0,0),(1,0))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5705 5706
	<entry> <literal>@@</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Center</entry>
5707 5708
	<entry><literal>@@ circle '((0,0),10)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5709
       <row>
5710 5711
	<entry> <literal>##</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Closest point to first operand on second operand</entry>
5712 5713
	<entry><literal>point '(0,0)' ## lseg '((2,0),(0,2))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5714
       <row>
5715
	<entry> <literal>&lt;-&gt;</literal> </entry>
5716 5717 5718
	<entry>Distance between</entry>
	<entry><literal>circle '((0,0),1)' &lt;-&gt; circle '((5,0),1)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5719
       <row>
5720
	<entry> <literal>&amp;&amp;</literal> </entry>
5721 5722 5723 5724
	<entry>Overlaps?</entry>
	<entry><literal>box '((0,0),(1,1))' &amp;&amp; box '((0,0),(2,2))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5725
	<entry> <literal>&amp;&lt;</literal> </entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
5726
	<entry>Does not extend to the right of?</entry>
5727 5728 5729
	<entry><literal>box '((0,0),(1,1))' &amp;&lt; box '((0,0),(2,2))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5730
	<entry> <literal>&amp;&gt;</literal> </entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
5731
	<entry>Does not extend to the left of?</entry>
5732 5733 5734
	<entry><literal>box '((0,0),(3,3))' &amp;&gt; box '((0,0),(2,2))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5735 5736
	<entry> <literal>&lt;&lt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Is left of?</entry>
5737 5738 5739
	<entry><literal>circle '((0,0),1)' &lt;&lt; circle '((5,0),1)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5740 5741
	<entry> <literal>&gt;&gt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Is right of?</entry>
5742 5743
	<entry><literal>circle '((5,0),1)' &gt;&gt; circle '((0,0),1)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5744
       <row>
5745 5746
	<entry> <literal>&lt;^</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Is below?</entry>
5747 5748
	<entry><literal>circle '((0,0),1)' &lt;^ circle '((0,5),1)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5749
       <row>
5750 5751
	<entry> <literal>&gt;^</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Is above?</entry>
5752 5753 5754
	<entry><literal>circle '((0,5),1)' >^ circle '((0,0),1)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5755 5756
	<entry> <literal>?#</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Intersects?</entry>
5757 5758 5759
	<entry><literal>lseg '((-1,0),(1,0))' ?# box '((-2,-2),(2,2))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5760 5761
	<entry> <literal>?-</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Is horizontal?</entry>
5762
	<entry><literal>?- lseg '((-1,0),(1,0))'</literal></entry>
5763 5764
       </row>
       <row>
5765 5766
	<entry> <literal>?-</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Are horizontally aligned?</entry>
5767
	<entry><literal>point '(1,0)' ?- point '(0,0)'</literal></entry>
5768 5769
       </row>
       <row>
5770 5771
	<entry> <literal>?|</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Is vertical?</entry>
5772
	<entry><literal>?| lseg '((-1,0),(1,0))'</literal></entry>
5773 5774
       </row>
       <row>
5775 5776
	<entry> <literal>?|</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Are vertically aligned?</entry>
5777 5778
	<entry><literal>point '(0,1)' ?| point '(0,0)'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5779
       <row>
5780 5781
	<entry> <literal>?-|</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Is perpendicular?</entry>
5782 5783
	<entry><literal>lseg '((0,0),(0,1))' ?-| lseg '((0,0),(1,0))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
5784
       <row>
5785 5786
	<entry> <literal>?||</literal> </entry>
	<entry>Are parallel?</entry>
5787 5788 5789
	<entry><literal>lseg '((-1,0),(1,0))' ?|| lseg '((-1,2),(1,2))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5790
	<entry> <literal>~</literal> </entry>
5791 5792
	<entry>Contains?</entry>
	<entry><literal>circle '((0,0),2)' ~ point '(1,1)'</literal></entry>
5793 5794
       </row>
       <row>
5795
	<entry> <literal>@</literal> </entry>
5796 5797
	<entry>Contained in or on?</entry>
	<entry><literal>point '(1,1)' @ circle '((0,0),2)'</literal></entry>
5798 5799
       </row>
       <row>
5800
	<entry> <literal>~=</literal> </entry>
5801
	<entry>Same as?</entry>
5802 5803 5804 5805 5806
	<entry><literal>polygon '((0,0),(1,1))' ~= polygon '((1,1),(0,0))'</literal></entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
   </table>
5807

5808 5809

   <table id="functions-geometry-func-table">
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5810 5811 5812 5813 5814
     <title>Geometric Functions</title>
     <tgroup cols="4">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Function</entry>
5815
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
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Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5816 5817 5818 5819 5820 5821
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
5822
	<entry><literal><function>area</function>(<replaceable>object</>)</literal></entry>
5823
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
5824
	<entry>area</entry>
5825
	<entry><literal>area(box '((0,0),(1,1))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5826 5827
       </row>
       <row>
5828
	<entry><literal><function>box_intersect</function>(<type>box</>, <type>box</>)</literal></entry>
5829
	<entry><type>box</type></entry>
5830
	<entry>intersection box</entry>
5831
	<entry><literal>box_intersect(box '((0,0),(1,1))',box '((0.5,0.5),(2,2))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5832 5833
       </row>
       <row>
5834
	<entry><literal><function>center</function>(<replaceable>object</>)</literal></entry>
5835
	<entry><type>point</type></entry>
5836
	<entry>center</entry>
5837
	<entry><literal>center(box '((0,0),(1,2))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5838 5839
       </row>
       <row>
5840
	<entry><literal><function>diameter</function>(<type>circle</>)</literal></entry>
5841
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
5842
	<entry>diameter of circle</entry>
5843
	<entry><literal>diameter(circle '((0,0),2.0)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5844 5845
       </row>
       <row>
5846
	<entry><literal><function>height</function>(<type>box</>)</literal></entry>
5847
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
5848
	<entry>vertical size of box</entry>
5849
	<entry><literal>height(box '((0,0),(1,1))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5850 5851
       </row>
       <row>
5852
	<entry><literal><function>isclosed</function>(<type>path</>)</literal></entry>
5853
	<entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
5854
	<entry>a closed path?</entry>
5855
	<entry><literal>isclosed(path '((0,0),(1,1),(2,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5856 5857
       </row>
       <row>
5858
	<entry><literal><function>isopen</function>(<type>path</>)</literal></entry>
5859
	<entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
5860
	<entry>an open path?</entry>
5861
	<entry><literal>isopen(path '[(0,0),(1,1),(2,0)]')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5862 5863
       </row>
       <row>
5864
	<entry><literal><function>length</function>(<replaceable>object</>)</literal></entry>
5865
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
5866
	<entry>length</entry>
5867
	<entry><literal>length(path '((-1,0),(1,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5868
       </row>
5869
       <row>
5870
	<entry><literal><function>npoints</function>(<type>path</>)</literal></entry>
5871 5872 5873 5874 5875
	<entry><type>integer</type></entry>
	<entry>number of points</entry>
	<entry><literal>npoints(path '[(0,0),(1,1),(2,0)]')</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
5876
	<entry><literal><function>npoints</function>(<type>polygon</>)</literal></entry>
5877 5878 5879 5880
	<entry><type>integer</type></entry>
	<entry>number of points</entry>
	<entry><literal>npoints(polygon '((1,1),(0,0))')</literal></entry>
       </row>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5881
       <row>
5882
	<entry><literal><function>pclose</function>(<type>path</>)</literal></entry>
5883
	<entry><type>path</type></entry>
5884
	<entry>convert path to closed</entry>
5885
	<entry><literal>popen(path '[(0,0),(1,1),(2,0)]')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5886
       </row>
5887 5888
<![IGNORE[
<!-- Not defined by this name. Implements the intersection operator '#' -->
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5889
       <row>
5890
	<entry><literal><function>point</function>(<type>lseg</>, <type>lseg</>)</literal></entry>
5891
	<entry><type>point</type></entry>
5892
	<entry>intersection</entry>
5893
	<entry><literal>point(lseg '((-1,0),(1,0))',lseg '((-2,-2),(2,2))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5894
       </row>
5895
]]>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5896
       <row>
5897
	<entry><literal><function>popen</function>(<type>path</>)</literal></entry>
5898
	<entry><type>path</type></entry>
5899
	<entry>convert path to open</entry>
5900
	<entry><literal>popen(path '((0,0),(1,1),(2,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5901 5902
       </row>
       <row>
5903
	<entry><literal><function>radius</function>(<type>circle</type>)</literal></entry>
5904
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
5905
	<entry>radius of circle</entry>
5906
	<entry><literal>radius(circle '((0,0),2.0)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5907 5908
       </row>
       <row>
5909
	<entry><literal><function>width</function>(<type>box</>)</literal></entry>
5910
	<entry><type>double precision</type></entry>
5911
	<entry>horizontal size of box</entry>
5912
	<entry><literal>width(box '((0,0),(1,1))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5913 5914 5915
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
5916
   </table>
5917

5918

5919
   <table id="functions-geometry-conv-table">
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5920 5921 5922 5923 5924
     <title>Geometric Type Conversion Functions</title>
     <tgroup cols="4">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Function</entry>
5925
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5926 5927 5928 5929 5930 5931
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
5932
	<entry><literal><function>box</function>(<type>circle</type>)</literal></entry>
5933
	<entry><type>box</type></entry>
5934
	<entry>circle to box</entry>
5935
	<entry><literal>box(circle '((0,0),2.0)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5936 5937
       </row>
       <row>
5938
	<entry><literal><function>box</function>(<type>point</type>, <type>point</type>)</literal></entry>
5939
	<entry><type>box</type></entry>
5940
	<entry>points to box</entry>
5941
	<entry><literal>box(point '(0,0)', point '(1,1)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5942 5943
       </row>
       <row>
5944
	<entry><literal><function>box</function>(<type>polygon</type>)</literal></entry>
5945
	<entry><type>box</type></entry>
5946
	<entry>polygon to box</entry>
5947
	<entry><literal>box(polygon '((0,0),(1,1),(2,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5948 5949
       </row>
       <row>
5950
	<entry><literal><function>circle</function>(<type>box</type>)</literal></entry>
5951
	<entry><type>circle</type></entry>
5952
	<entry>box to circle</entry>
5953
	<entry><literal>circle(box '((0,0),(1,1))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5954 5955
       </row>
       <row>
5956
	<entry><literal><function>circle</function>(<type>point</type>, <type>double precision</type>)</literal></entry>
5957
	<entry><type>circle</type></entry>
5958
	<entry>point and radius to circle</entry>
5959
	<entry><literal>circle(point '(0,0)', 2.0)</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5960 5961
       </row>
       <row>
5962
	<entry><literal><function>lseg</function>(<type>box</type>)</literal></entry>
5963
	<entry><type>lseg</type></entry>
5964
	<entry>box diagonal to line segment</entry>
5965
	<entry><literal>lseg(box '((-1,0),(1,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5966 5967
       </row>
       <row>
5968
	<entry><literal><function>lseg</function>(<type>point</type>, <type>point</type>)</literal></entry>
5969
	<entry><type>lseg</type></entry>
5970
	<entry>points to line segment</entry>
5971
	<entry><literal>lseg(point '(-1,0)', point '(1,0)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5972 5973
       </row>
       <row>
5974
	<entry><literal><function>path</function>(<type>polygon</type>)</literal></entry>
5975
	<entry><type>point</type></entry>
5976
	<entry>polygon to path</entry>
5977
	<entry><literal>path(polygon '((0,0),(1,1),(2,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5978 5979
       </row>
       <row>
5980
	<entry><literal><function>point</function>(<type>circle</type>)</literal></entry>
5981
	<entry><type>point</type></entry>
5982
	<entry>center of circle</entry>
5983
	<entry><literal>point(circle '((0,0),2.0)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5984 5985
       </row>
       <row>
5986
	<entry><literal><function>point</function>(<type>lseg</type>, <type>lseg</type>)</literal></entry>
5987
	<entry><type>point</type></entry>
5988
	<entry>intersection</entry>
5989
	<entry><literal>point(lseg '((-1,0),(1,0))', lseg '((-2,-2),(2,2))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5990 5991
       </row>
       <row>
5992
	<entry><literal><function>point</function>(<type>polygon</type>)</literal></entry>
5993
	<entry><type>point</type></entry>
5994
	<entry>center of polygon</entry>
5995
	<entry><literal>point(polygon '((0,0),(1,1),(2,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
5996 5997
       </row>
       <row>
5998
	<entry><literal><function>polygon</function>(<type>box</type>)</literal></entry>
5999
	<entry><type>polygon</type></entry>
6000
	<entry>box to 4-point polygon</entry>
6001
	<entry><literal>polygon(box '((0,0),(1,1))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6002 6003
       </row>
       <row>
6004
	<entry><literal><function>polygon</function>(<type>circle</type>)</literal></entry>
6005
	<entry><type>polygon</type></entry>
6006
	<entry>circle to 12-point polygon</entry>
6007
	<entry><literal>polygon(circle '((0,0),2.0)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6008 6009
       </row>
       <row>
6010
	<entry><literal><function>polygon</function>(<replaceable class="parameter">npts</replaceable>, <type>circle</type>)</literal></entry>
6011
	<entry><type>polygon</type></entry>
6012
	<entry>circle to <replaceable class="parameter">npts</replaceable>-point polygon</entry>
6013
	<entry><literal>polygon(12, circle '((0,0),2.0)')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6014 6015
       </row>
       <row>
6016
	<entry><literal><function>polygon</function>(<type>path</type>)</literal></entry>
6017
	<entry><type>polygon</type></entry>
6018
	<entry>path to polygon</entry>
6019
	<entry><literal>polygon(path '((0,0),(1,1),(2,0))')</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6020 6021 6022
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
6023 6024
   </table>

6025 6026
    <para>
     It is possible to access the two component numbers of a <type>point</>
6027
     as though it were an array with indices 0 and 1.  For example, if
6028
     <literal>t.p</> is a <type>point</> column then
6029
     <literal>SELECT p[0] FROM t</> retrieves the X coordinate and
6030
     <literal>UPDATE t SET p[1] = ...</> changes the Y coordinate.
6031 6032
     In the same way, a value of type <type>box</> or <type>lseg</> may be treated
     as an array of two <type>point</> values.
6033 6034
    </para>

6035 6036 6037 6038 6039 6040 6041 6042 6043 6044 6045 6046 6047 6048 6049 6050
    <para>
     The <function>area</function> function works for the types
     <type>box</type>, <type>circle</type>, and <type>path</type>.
     The <function>area</function> function only works on the
     <type>path</type> data type if the points in the
     <type>path</type> are non-intersecting.  For example, the
     <type>path</type>
     <literal>'((0,0),(0,1),(2,1),(2,2),(1,2),(1,0),(0,0))'::PATH</literal>
     won't work, however, the following visually identical
     <type>path</type>
     <literal>'((0,0),(0,1),(1,1),(1,2),(2,2),(2,1),(1,1),(1,0),(0,0))'::PATH</literal>
     will work.  If the concept of an intersecting versus
     non-intersecting <type>path</type> is confusing, draw both of the
     above <type>path</type>s side by side on a piece of graph paper.
    </para>

6051
  </sect1>
6052

6053

6054 6055
 <sect1 id="functions-net">
  <title>Network Address Type Functions</title>
6056

6057 6058
  <para>
   <xref linkend="cidr-inet-operators-table"> shows the operators
6059
   available for the <type>cidr</type> and <type>inet</type> types.
6060
   The operators <literal>&lt;&lt;</literal>,
6061 6062
   <literal>&lt;&lt;=</literal>, <literal>&gt;&gt;</literal>, and
   <literal>&gt;&gt;=</literal> test for subnet inclusion.  They
6063 6064 6065 6066
   consider only the network parts of the two addresses, ignoring any
   host part, and determine whether one network part is identical to
   or a subnet of the other.
  </para>
6067

6068
    <table id="cidr-inet-operators-table">
6069 6070 6071 6072 6073 6074
     <title><type>cidr</type> and <type>inet</type> Operators</title>
     <tgroup cols="3">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Operator</entry>
	<entry>Description</entry>
6075
	<entry>Example</entry>
6076 6077 6078 6079
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
6080 6081
	<entry> <literal>&lt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>is less than</entry>
6082 6083 6084
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1.5' &lt; inet '192.168.1.6'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6085 6086
	<entry> <literal>&lt;=</literal> </entry>
	<entry>is less than or equal</entry>
6087 6088 6089
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1.5' &lt;= inet '192.168.1.5'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6090 6091
	<entry> <literal>=</literal> </entry>
	<entry>equals</entry>
6092 6093 6094
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1.5' = inet '192.168.1.5'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6095 6096
	<entry> <literal>&gt;=</literal> </entry>
	<entry>is greater or equal</entry>
6097 6098 6099
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1.5' &gt;= inet '192.168.1.5'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6100 6101
	<entry> <literal>&gt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>is greater than</entry>
6102 6103 6104
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1.5' &gt; inet '192.168.1.4'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6105 6106
	<entry> <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>is not equal</entry>
6107 6108 6109
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1.5' &lt;&gt; inet '192.168.1.4'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6110
	<entry> <literal>&lt;&lt;</literal> </entry>
6111 6112 6113 6114
	<entry>is contained within</entry>
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1.5' &lt;&lt; inet '192.168.1/24'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6115
	<entry> <literal>&lt;&lt;=</literal> </entry>
6116 6117 6118 6119
	<entry>is contained within or equals</entry>
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1/24' &lt;&lt;= inet '192.168.1/24'</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
6120
	<entry> <literal>&gt;&gt;</literal> </entry>
6121
	<entry>contains</entry>
6122
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1/24' &gt;&gt; inet '192.168.1.5'</literal></entry>
6123 6124
       </row>
       <row>
6125
	<entry> <literal>&gt;&gt;=</literal> </entry>
6126 6127 6128 6129 6130 6131
	<entry>contains or equals</entry>
	<entry><literal>inet '192.168.1/24' &gt;&gt;= inet '192.168.1/24'</literal></entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>
6132

6133 6134
  <para>
   <xref linkend="cidr-inet-functions-table"> shows the functions
6135 6136 6137
   available for use with the <type>cidr</type> and <type>inet</type>
   types.  The <function>host</function>,
   <function>text</function>, and <function>abbrev</function>
6138
   functions are primarily intended to offer alternative display
6139 6140 6141
   formats. You can cast a text value to <type>inet</> using normal casting
   syntax: <literal>inet(<replaceable>expression</>)</literal> or
   <literal><replaceable>colname</>::inet</literal>.
6142
  </para>
6143

6144
    <table id="cidr-inet-functions-table">
6145
     <title><type>cidr</type> and <type>inet</type> Functions</title>
6146
     <tgroup cols="5">
T
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6147 6148 6149
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Function</entry>
6150
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
T
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6151 6152
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
6153
	<entry>Result</entry>
T
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6154 6155 6156 6157
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
6158
	<entry><literal><function>broadcast</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
6159
	<entry><type>inet</type></entry>
6160
	<entry>broadcast address for network</entry>
6161 6162
	<entry><literal>broadcast('192.168.1.5/24')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>192.168.1.255/24</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6163 6164
       </row>
       <row>
6165
	<entry><literal><function>host</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
6166
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
6167
	<entry>extract IP address as text</entry>
6168 6169
	<entry><literal>host('192.168.1.5/24')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>192.168.1.5</literal></entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6170 6171
       </row>
       <row>
6172
	<entry><literal><function>masklen</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
6173
	<entry><type>integer</type></entry>
6174
	<entry>extract netmask length</entry>
6175 6176
	<entry><literal>masklen('192.168.1.5/24')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>24</literal></entry>
T
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6177
       </row>
B
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6178
       <row>
6179
	<entry><literal><function>set_masklen</function>(<type>inet</type>, <type>integer</type>)</literal></entry>
6180
	<entry><type>inet</type></entry>
6181
	<entry>set netmask length for <type>inet</type> value</entry>
6182
	<entry><literal>set_masklen('192.168.1.5/24', 16)</literal></entry>
6183
	<entry><literal>192.168.1.5/16</literal></entry>
B
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6184
       </row>
T
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6185
       <row>
6186
	<entry><literal><function>netmask</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
6187
	<entry><type>inet</type></entry>
6188
	<entry>construct netmask for network</entry>
6189 6190
	<entry><literal>netmask('192.168.1.5/24')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>255.255.255.0</literal></entry>
6191
       </row>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
6192
       <row>
6193
	<entry><literal><function>hostmask</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
6194
	<entry><type>inet</type></entry>
6195
	<entry>construct host mask for network</entry>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
6196 6197 6198
	<entry><literal>hostmask('192.168.23.20/30')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>0.0.0.3</literal></entry>
       </row>
6199
       <row>
6200
	<entry><literal><function>network</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
6201
	<entry><type>cidr</type></entry>
6202
	<entry>extract network part of address</entry>
6203 6204
	<entry><literal>network('192.168.1.5/24')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>192.168.1.0/24</literal></entry>
6205 6206
       </row>
       <row>
6207
	<entry><literal><function>text</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
6208
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
6209
	<entry>extract IP address and netmask length as text</entry>
6210 6211
	<entry><literal>text(inet '192.168.1.5')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>192.168.1.5/32</literal></entry>
6212
       </row>
6213
       <row>
6214
	<entry><literal><function>abbrev</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
6215
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
6216
	<entry>abbreviated display format as text</entry>
6217 6218
	<entry><literal>abbrev(cidr '10.1.0.0/16')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>10.1/16</literal></entry>
6219
       </row>
6220 6221 6222 6223 6224 6225 6226
       <row>
    <entry><literal><function>family</function>(<type>inet</type>)</literal></entry>
    <entry><type>integer</type></entry>
    <entry>extract family of address; <literal>4</literal> for IPv4,
    <literal>6</literal> for IPv6</entry>
    <entry><literal>family('::1')</literal></entry>
    <entry><literal>6</literal></entry>
6227
       </row>
6228 6229 6230 6231
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>

6232 6233
  <para>
   <xref linkend="macaddr-functions-table"> shows the functions
6234 6235 6236
   available for use with the <type>macaddr</type> type.  The function
   <literal><function>trunc</function>(<type>macaddr</type>)</literal> returns a MAC
   address with the last 3 bytes set to zero.  This can be used to
6237 6238 6239 6240 6241
   associate the remaining prefix with a manufacturer.  The directory
   <filename>contrib/mac</filename> in the source distribution
   contains some utilities to create and maintain such an association
   table.
  </para>
6242

6243
    <table id="macaddr-functions-table">
6244
     <title><type>macaddr</type> Functions</title>
6245 6246 6247 6248
     <tgroup cols="5">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Function</entry>
6249
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
6250 6251 6252
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
	<entry>Result</entry>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6253
       </row>
6254 6255
      </thead>
      <tbody>
6256
       <row>
6257
	<entry><literal><function>trunc</function>(<type>macaddr</type>)</literal></entry>
6258
	<entry><type>macaddr</type></entry>
6259
	<entry>set last 3 bytes to zero</entry>
6260 6261
	<entry><literal>trunc(macaddr '12:34:56:78:90:ab')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>12:34:56:00:00:00</literal></entry>
6262
       </row>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6263 6264 6265
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>
6266

6267
   <para>
6268 6269
    The <type>macaddr</type> type also supports the standard relational
    operators (<literal>&gt;</literal>, <literal>&lt;=</literal>, etc.) for
6270 6271 6272
    lexicographical ordering.
   </para>

T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
6273
  </sect1>
6274

6275

6276
 <sect1 id="functions-sequence">
6277
  <title>Sequence Manipulation Functions</title>
6278 6279

  <indexterm>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6280
   <primary>sequence</primary>
6281 6282 6283 6284 6285 6286 6287 6288 6289 6290 6291
  </indexterm>
  <indexterm>
   <primary>nextval</primary>
  </indexterm>
  <indexterm>
   <primary>currval</primary>
  </indexterm>
  <indexterm>
   <primary>setval</primary>
  </indexterm>

6292 6293 6294 6295 6296 6297 6298 6299 6300 6301 6302 6303 6304
  <para>
   This section describes <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s functions
   for operating on <firstterm>sequence objects</firstterm>.
   Sequence objects (also called sequence generators or
   just sequences) are special single-row tables created with
   <command>CREATE SEQUENCE</command>.  A sequence object is usually used to
   generate unique identifiers for rows of a table.  The sequence functions,
   listed in <xref linkend="functions-sequence-table">,
   provide simple, multiuser-safe methods for obtaining successive
   sequence values from sequence objects.
  </para>

   <table id="functions-sequence-table">
6305
    <title>Sequence Functions</title>
6306 6307
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
6308
      <row><entry>Function</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry></row>
6309 6310 6311 6312
     </thead>

     <tbody>
      <row>
6313
	<entry><literal><function>nextval</function>(<type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
6314
	<entry><type>bigint</type></entry>
6315
	<entry>Advance sequence and return new value</entry>
6316 6317
      </row>
      <row>
6318
	<entry><literal><function>currval</function>(<type>text</type>)</literal></entry>
6319
	<entry><type>bigint</type></entry>
6320
	<entry>Return value most recently obtained with <function>nextval</function></entry>
6321 6322
      </row>
      <row>
6323
	<entry><literal><function>setval</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>bigint</type>)</literal></entry>
6324
	<entry><type>bigint</type></entry>
6325
	<entry>Set sequence's current value</entry>
6326 6327
      </row>
      <row>
6328
	<entry><literal><function>setval</function>(<type>text</type>, <type>bigint</type>, <type>boolean</type>)</literal></entry>
6329
	<entry><type>bigint</type></entry>
6330
	<entry>Set sequence's current value and <literal>is_called</literal> flag</entry>
6331 6332 6333 6334 6335 6336
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>

  <para>
6337 6338 6339 6340
   For largely historical reasons, the sequence to be operated on by a
   sequence-function call is specified by a text-string argument.  To
   achieve some compatibility with the handling of ordinary
   <acronym>SQL</acronym> names, the sequence functions convert their
6341
   argument to lowercase unless the string is double-quoted.  Thus
6342
<programlisting>
6343 6344 6345
nextval('foo')      <lineannotation>operates on sequence <literal>foo</literal></>
nextval('FOO')      <lineannotation>operates on sequence <literal>foo</literal></>
nextval('"Foo"')    <lineannotation>operates on sequence <literal>Foo</literal></>
6346 6347 6348
</programlisting>
   The sequence name can be schema-qualified if necessary:
<programlisting>
6349 6350 6351
nextval('myschema.foo')     <lineannotation>operates on <literal>myschema.foo</literal></>
nextval('"myschema".foo')   <lineannotation>same as above</lineannotation>
nextval('foo')              <lineannotation>searches search path for <literal>foo</literal></>
6352 6353 6354 6355 6356 6357 6358 6359 6360 6361
</programlisting>
   Of course, the text argument can be the result of an expression,
   not only a simple literal, which is occasionally useful.
  </para>

  <para>
   The available sequence functions are:

    <variablelist>
     <varlistentry>
6362
      <term><function>nextval</function></term>
6363 6364 6365
      <listitem>
       <para>
        Advance the sequence object to its next value and return that
6366
	value.  This is done atomically: even if multiple sessions
6367
	execute <function>nextval</function> concurrently, each will safely receive
6368 6369 6370 6371 6372 6373
	a distinct sequence value.
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
6374
      <term><function>currval</function></term>
6375 6376
      <listitem>
       <para>
6377
        Return the value most recently obtained by <function>nextval</function>
6378
	for this sequence in the current session.  (An error is
6379
	reported if <function>nextval</function> has never been called for this
6380 6381 6382
	sequence in this session.)  Notice that because this is returning
	a session-local value, it gives a predictable answer even if other
	sessions are executing <function>nextval</function> meanwhile.
6383 6384 6385 6386 6387
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
6388
      <term><function>setval</function></term>
6389 6390 6391
      <listitem>
       <para>
        Reset the sequence object's counter value.  The two-parameter
6392 6393 6394
	form sets the sequence's <literal>last_value</literal> field to the specified
	value and sets its <literal>is_called</literal> field to <literal>true</literal>,
	meaning that the next <function>nextval</function> will advance the sequence
6395
	before returning a value.  In the three-parameter form,
6396 6397 6398
	<literal>is_called</literal> may be set either <literal>true</literal> or
	<literal>false</literal>.  If it's set to <literal>false</literal>,
	the next <function>nextval</function> will return exactly the specified
6399
	value, and sequence advancement commences with the following
6400
	<function>nextval</function>.  For example,
6401 6402

<screen>
6403
SELECT setval('foo', 42);           <lineannotation>Next <function>nextval</> will return 43</lineannotation>
6404
SELECT setval('foo', 42, true);     <lineannotation>Same as above</lineannotation>
6405
SELECT setval('foo', 42, false);    <lineannotation>Next <function>nextval</> will return 42</lineannotation>
6406 6407
</screen>

6408
        The result returned by <function>setval</function> is just the value of its
6409 6410 6411 6412 6413 6414 6415 6416 6417 6418
	second argument.
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>
    </variablelist>
  </para>

  <important>
   <para>
    To avoid blocking of concurrent transactions that obtain numbers from the
6419
    same sequence, a <function>nextval</function> operation is never rolled back;
6420
    that is, once a value has been fetched it is considered used, even if the
6421
    transaction that did the <function>nextval</function> later aborts.  This means
6422
    that aborted transactions may leave unused <quote>holes</quote> in the
6423
    sequence of assigned values.  <function>setval</function> operations are never
6424 6425 6426 6427 6428 6429
    rolled back, either.
   </para>
  </important>

  <para>
   If a sequence object has been created with default parameters,
6430 6431
   <function>nextval</function> calls on it will return successive values
   beginning with 1.  Other behaviors can be obtained by using
6432
   special parameters in the <xref linkend="SQL-CREATESEQUENCE"> command;
6433 6434 6435 6436 6437 6438
   see its command reference page for more information.
  </para>

 </sect1>


6439 6440 6441
 <sect1 id="functions-conditional">
  <title>Conditional Expressions</title>

6442
  <indexterm>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6443
   <primary>CASE</primary>
6444 6445 6446
  </indexterm>

  <indexterm>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6447
   <primary>conditional expression</primary>
6448 6449
  </indexterm>

6450
  <para>
6451
   This section describes the <acronym>SQL</acronym>-compliant conditional expressions
6452
   available in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
6453 6454 6455 6456 6457 6458 6459 6460 6461 6462
  </para>

  <tip>
   <para>
    If your needs go beyond the capabilities of these conditional
    expressions you might want to consider writing a stored procedure
    in a more expressive programming language.
   </para>
  </tip>

6463
  <sect2>
6464 6465 6466 6467 6468 6469
   <title><literal>CASE</></title>

  <para>
   The <acronym>SQL</acronym> <token>CASE</token> expression is a
   generic conditional expression, similar to if/else statements in
   other languages:
6470 6471 6472 6473 6474 6475 6476 6477

<synopsis>
CASE WHEN <replaceable>condition</replaceable> THEN <replaceable>result</replaceable>
     <optional>WHEN ...</optional>
     <optional>ELSE <replaceable>result</replaceable></optional>
END
</synopsis>

6478
   <token>CASE</token> clauses can be used wherever
6479
   an expression is valid.  <replaceable>condition</replaceable> is an
6480
   expression that returns a <type>boolean</type> result.  If the result is true
6481 6482
   then the value of the <token>CASE</token> expression is the
   <replaceable>result</replaceable> that follows the condition.  If the result is false any
6483 6484 6485 6486 6487
   subsequent <token>WHEN</token> clauses are searched in the same
   manner.  If no <token>WHEN</token>
   <replaceable>condition</replaceable> is true then the value of the
   case expression is the <replaceable>result</replaceable> in the
   <token>ELSE</token> clause.  If the <token>ELSE</token> clause is
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6488
   omitted and no condition matches, the result is null.
6489 6490 6491 6492 6493
  </para>

   <para>
    An example:
<screen>
6494 6495
SELECT * FROM test;

6496 6497 6498 6499 6500
 a
---
 1
 2
 3
6501 6502 6503 6504 6505 6506 6507 6508 6509


SELECT a,
       CASE WHEN a=1 THEN 'one'
            WHEN a=2 THEN 'two'
            ELSE 'other'
       END
    FROM test;

6510 6511 6512 6513 6514 6515 6516 6517 6518
 a | case
---+-------
 1 | one
 2 | two
 3 | other
</screen>
   </para>

  <para>
6519
   The data types of all the <replaceable>result</replaceable>
6520
   expressions must be convertible to a single output type.
6521
   See <xref linkend="typeconv-union-case"> for more detail.
6522 6523
  </para>

6524 6525 6526 6527
  <para>
   The following <quote>simple</quote> <token>CASE</token> expression is a
   specialized variant of the general form above:

6528 6529 6530 6531 6532 6533 6534 6535
<synopsis>
CASE <replaceable>expression</replaceable>
    WHEN <replaceable>value</replaceable> THEN <replaceable>result</replaceable>
    <optional>WHEN ...</optional>
    <optional>ELSE <replaceable>result</replaceable></optional>
END
</synopsis>

6536
   The
6537
   <replaceable>expression</replaceable> is computed and compared to
6538
   all the <replaceable>value</replaceable> specifications in the
6539 6540
   <token>WHEN</token> clauses until one is found that is equal.  If
   no match is found, the <replaceable>result</replaceable> in the
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6541
   <token>ELSE</token> clause (or a null value) is returned.  This is similar
6542 6543 6544 6545 6546 6547 6548
   to the <function>switch</function> statement in C.
  </para>

   <para>
    The example above can be written using the simple
    <token>CASE</token> syntax:
<screen>
6549 6550 6551 6552 6553 6554 6555
SELECT a,
       CASE a WHEN 1 THEN 'one'
              WHEN 2 THEN 'two'
              ELSE 'other'
       END
    FROM test;

6556 6557 6558 6559 6560 6561
 a | case
---+-------
 1 | one
 2 | two
 3 | other
</screen>
6562 6563 6564 6565 6566 6567 6568 6569 6570 6571
   </para>

   <para>
    A <token>CASE</token> expression does not evaluate any subexpressions
    that are not needed to determine the result.  For example, this is a
    possible way of avoiding a division-by-zero failure:
<programlisting>
SELECT ... WHERE CASE WHEN x &lt;&gt; 0 THEN y/x &gt; 1.5 ELSE false END;
</programlisting>
   </para>
6572
  </sect2>
6573

6574
  <sect2>
6575
   <title><literal>COALESCE</></title>
6576

P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6577 6578 6579 6580
  <indexterm>
   <primary>COALESCE</primary>
  </indexterm>

6581
<synopsis>
6582
<function>COALESCE</function>(<replaceable>value</replaceable> <optional>, ...</optional>)
6583 6584 6585 6586
</synopsis>

  <para>
   The <function>COALESCE</function> function returns the first of its
6587 6588
   arguments that is not null.  Null is returned only if all arguments
   are null.  This is often useful to substitute a
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6589
   default value for null values when data is retrieved for display,
6590 6591 6592 6593 6594
   for example:
<programlisting>
SELECT COALESCE(description, short_description, '(none)') ...
</programlisting>
  </para>
6595 6596 6597 6598 6599 6600 6601

   <para>
    Like a <token>CASE</token> expression, <function>COALESCE</function> will
    not evaluate arguments that are not needed to determine the result;
    that is, arguments to the right of the first non-null argument are
    not evaluated.
   </para>
6602
  </sect2>
6603

6604
  <sect2>
6605
   <title><literal>NULLIF</></title>
6606

6607
  <indexterm>
6608
   <primary>NULLIF</primary>
6609 6610
  </indexterm>

6611
<synopsis>
6612
<function>NULLIF</function>(<replaceable>value1</replaceable>, <replaceable>value2</replaceable>)
6613 6614 6615
</synopsis>

  <para>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
6616
   The <function>NULLIF</function> function returns a null value if and only
6617 6618 6619 6620 6621 6622 6623 6624 6625
   if <replaceable>value1</replaceable> and
   <replaceable>value2</replaceable> are equal.  Otherwise it returns
   <replaceable>value1</replaceable>.  This can be used to perform the
   inverse operation of the <function>COALESCE</function> example
   given above:
<programlisting>
SELECT NULLIF(value, '(none)') ...
</programlisting>
  </para>
6626

6627
  </sect2>
6628

6629 6630 6631
 </sect1>


6632 6633
 <sect1 id="functions-array">
  <title>Array Functions and Operators</title>
6634

6635
  <para>
6636 6637
   <xref linkend="array-operators-table"> shows the operators
   available for <type>array</type> types.
6638 6639
  </para>

6640 6641 6642 6643 6644 6645 6646 6647 6648 6649 6650 6651 6652 6653 6654 6655 6656 6657
    <table id="array-operators-table">
     <title><type>array</type> Operators</title>
     <tgroup cols="4">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Operator</entry>
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
	<entry>Result</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>=</literal> </entry>
	<entry>equal</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1.1,2.1,3.1]::int[] = ARRAY[1,2,3]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>t</literal></entry>
       </row>
6658

6659 6660 6661 6662 6663 6664
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>not equal</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1,2,3] &lt;&gt; ARRAY[1,2,4]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>t</literal></entry>
       </row>
6665

6666 6667 6668 6669 6670 6671
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>&lt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>less than</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1,2,3] &lt; ARRAY[1,2,4]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>t</literal></entry>
       </row>
6672

6673 6674 6675 6676 6677 6678
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>&gt;</literal> </entry>
	<entry>greater than</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1,4,3] &gt; ARRAY[1,2,4]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>t</literal></entry>
       </row>
6679

6680 6681 6682 6683 6684 6685
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>&lt;=</literal> </entry>
	<entry>less than or equal</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1,2,3] &lt;= ARRAY[1,2,3]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>t</literal></entry>
       </row>
6686

6687 6688 6689 6690 6691 6692
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>&gt;=</literal> </entry>
	<entry>greater than or equal</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1,4,3] &gt;= ARRAY[1,4,3]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>t</literal></entry>
       </row>
6693

6694 6695 6696 6697 6698 6699
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>||</literal> </entry>
	<entry>array-to-array concatenation</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1,2,3] || ARRAY[4,5,6]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{1,2,3,4,5,6}</literal></entry>
       </row>
6700

6701 6702 6703 6704 6705 6706
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>||</literal> </entry>
	<entry>array-to-array concatenation</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[1,2,3] || ARRAY[[4,5,6],[7,8,9]]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{{1,2,3},{4,5,6},{7,8,9}}</literal></entry>
       </row>
6707

6708 6709 6710 6711 6712 6713
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>||</literal> </entry>
	<entry>element-to-array concatenation</entry>
	<entry><literal>3 || ARRAY[4,5,6]</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{3,4,5,6}</literal></entry>
       </row>
6714

6715 6716 6717 6718 6719 6720 6721 6722 6723
       <row>
	<entry> <literal>||</literal> </entry>
	<entry>array-to-element concatenation</entry>
	<entry><literal>ARRAY[4,5,6] || 7</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{4,5,6,7}</literal></entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>
6724

6725
  <para>
6726 6727
   See <xref linkend="arrays"> for more details about array operator
   behavior.
6728 6729
  </para>

6730 6731 6732 6733 6734
  <para>
   <xref linkend="array-functions-table"> shows the functions
   available for use with array types. See <xref linkend="arrays">
   for more discussion and examples for the use of these functions.
  </para>
6735

6736 6737 6738 6739 6740 6741 6742 6743 6744 6745 6746 6747 6748 6749 6750 6751 6752 6753 6754 6755 6756 6757 6758 6759 6760 6761 6762 6763 6764 6765 6766 6767 6768 6769 6770 6771 6772 6773 6774 6775 6776 6777 6778 6779 6780 6781 6782 6783 6784 6785 6786 6787 6788 6789 6790 6791 6792 6793 6794 6795 6796 6797 6798 6799 6800 6801 6802 6803 6804 6805 6806 6807 6808 6809 6810 6811 6812 6813 6814 6815 6816 6817 6818 6819 6820 6821 6822 6823 6824 6825 6826 6827 6828 6829 6830 6831 6832 6833 6834 6835 6836 6837 6838 6839 6840 6841 6842 6843 6844 6845 6846 6847 6848 6849 6850 6851 6852 6853 6854 6855 6856 6857 6858 6859 6860 6861 6862 6863 6864 6865 6866 6867 6868 6869 6870 6871 6872
    <table id="array-functions-table">
     <title><type>array</type> Functions</title>
     <tgroup cols="5">
      <thead>
       <row>
	<entry>Function</entry>
	<entry>Return Type</entry>
	<entry>Description</entry>
	<entry>Example</entry>
	<entry>Result</entry>
       </row>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>array_cat</function>
      (<type>anyarray</type>, <type>anyarray</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>anyarray</type></entry>
	<entry>
     concatenate two arrays, returning <literal>NULL</literal>
     for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>array_cat(ARRAY[1,2,3], ARRAY[4,5])</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{1,2,3,4,5}</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>array_append</function>
      (<type>anyarray</type>, <type>anyelement</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>anyarray</type></entry>
	<entry>
     append an element to the end of an array, returning
     <literal>NULL</literal> for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>array_append(ARRAY[1,2], 3)</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{1,2,3}</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>array_prepend</function>
      (<type>anyelement</type>, <type>anyarray</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>anyarray</type></entry>
	<entry>
     append an element to the beginning of an array, returning
     <literal>NULL</literal> for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>array_prepend(1, ARRAY[2,3])</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{1,2,3}</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>array_dims</function>
      (<type>anyarray</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
	<entry>
     returns a text representation of array dimension lower and upper bounds,
     generating an ERROR for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>array_dims(array[[1,2,3], [4,5,6]])</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>[1:2][1:3]</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>array_lower</function>
      (<type>anyarray</type>, <type>integer</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>integer</type></entry>
	<entry>
     returns lower bound of the requested array dimension, returning
     <literal>NULL</literal> for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>array_lower(array_prepend(0, ARRAY[1,2,3]), 1)</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>0</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>array_upper</function>
      (<type>anyarray</type>, <type>integer</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>integer</type></entry>
	<entry>
     returns upper bound of the requested array dimension, returning
     <literal>NULL</literal> for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>array_upper(ARRAY[1,2,3,4], 1)</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>4</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>array_to_string</function>
      (<type>anyarray</type>, <type>text</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>text</type></entry>
	<entry>
     concatenates array elements using provided delimiter, returning
     <literal>NULL</literal> for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>array_to_string(array[1, 2, 3], '~^~')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>1~^~2~^~3</literal></entry>
       </row>
       <row>
	<entry>
     <literal>
      <function>string_to_array</function>
      (<type>text</type>, <type>text</type>)
     </literal>
    </entry>
	<entry><type>text[]</type></entry>
	<entry>
     splits string into array elements using provided delimiter, returning
     <literal>NULL</literal> for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs
    </entry>
	<entry><literal>string_to_array( 'xx~^~yy~^~zz', '~^~')</literal></entry>
	<entry><literal>{xx,yy,zz}</literal></entry>
       </row>
      </tbody>
     </tgroup>
    </table>
  </sect1>
6873

6874 6875 6876 6877 6878 6879 6880 6881 6882 6883 6884 6885 6886 6887 6888 6889 6890 6891 6892 6893 6894 6895 6896 6897 6898 6899 6900 6901 6902 6903 6904 6905 6906 6907 6908 6909 6910 6911 6912 6913 6914 6915 6916 6917 6918 6919 6920 6921 6922 6923 6924 6925 6926 6927 6928 6929 6930 6931 6932 6933 6934 6935 6936 6937 6938 6939 6940 6941 6942 6943 6944 6945 6946 6947 6948 6949 6950 6951 6952 6953 6954 6955 6956 6957 6958 6959 6960 6961 6962 6963 6964 6965 6966 6967 6968 6969 6970 6971 6972 6973 6974 6975 6976 6977 6978 6979 6980 6981 6982 6983 6984 6985 6986 6987 6988 6989 6990 6991 6992 6993 6994 6995 6996 6997 6998 6999 7000 7001 7002 7003 7004 7005 7006 7007
 <sect1 id="functions-aggregate">
  <title>Aggregate Functions</title>

  <indexterm zone="functions-aggregate">
   <primary>aggregate function</primary>
   <secondary>built-in</secondary>
  </indexterm>

  <para>
   <firstterm>Aggregate functions</firstterm> compute a single result
   value from a set of input values.  <xref
   linkend="functions-aggregate-table"> shows the built-in aggregate
   functions.  The special syntax considerations for aggregate
   functions are explained in <xref linkend="syntax-aggregates">.
   Consult <xref linkend="tutorial-agg"> for additional introductory
   information.
  </para>

  <table id="functions-aggregate-table">
   <title>Aggregate Functions</title>

   <tgroup cols="4">
    <thead>
     <row>
      <entry>Function</entry>
      <entry>Argument Type</entry>
      <entry>Return Type</entry>
      <entry>Description</entry>
     </row>
    </thead>

    <tbody>
     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>average</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>avg(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>smallint</type>, <type>integer</type>,
       <type>bigint</type>, <type>real</type>, <type>double
       precision</type>, <type>numeric</type>, or <type>interval</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>numeric</type> for any integer type argument,
       <type>double precision</type> for a floating-point argument,
       otherwise the same as the argument data type
      </entry>
      <entry>the average (arithmetic mean) of all input values</entry>
     </row>

     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>bit_and</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>bit_and(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>smallint</type>, <type>integer</type>, <type>bigint</type>, or
       <type>bit</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
        same as argument data type
      </entry>
      <entry>the bitwise AND of all non-null input values, or null if none</entry>
     </row>

     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>bit_or</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>bit_or(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>smallint</type>, <type>integer</type>, <type>bigint</type>, or
       <type>bit</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
        same as argument data type
      </entry>
      <entry>the bitwise OR of all non-null input values, or null if none</entry>
     </row>

     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>bool_and</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>bool_and(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>bool</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>bool</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>true if all input values are true, otherwise false</entry>
     </row>

     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>bool_or</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>bool_or(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>bool</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>bool</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>true if at least one input value is true, otherwise false</entry>
     </row>

     <row>
      <entry><function>count(*)</function></entry>
      <entry></entry>
      <entry><type>bigint</type></entry>
      <entry>number of input values</entry>
     </row>

     <row>
      <entry><function>count(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function></entry>
      <entry>any</entry>
      <entry><type>bigint</type></entry>
      <entry>
       number of input values for which the value of <replaceable
       class="parameter">expression</replaceable> is not null
      </entry>
     </row>
7008

7009 7010 7011 7012 7013 7014 7015 7016 7017 7018 7019 7020 7021 7022 7023
     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>every</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>every(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>bool</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>bool</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>equivalent to <function>bool_and</function></entry>
     </row>
7024

7025 7026 7027 7028 7029 7030 7031 7032 7033 7034
     <row>
      <entry><function>max(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function></entry>
      <entry>any numeric, string, or date/time type</entry>
      <entry>same as argument type</entry>
      <entry>
       maximum value of <replaceable
       class="parameter">expression</replaceable> across all input
       values
      </entry>
     </row>
7035

7036 7037 7038 7039 7040 7041 7042 7043 7044 7045
     <row>
      <entry><function>min(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function></entry>
      <entry>any numeric, string, or date/time type</entry>
      <entry>same as argument type</entry>
      <entry>
       minimum value of <replaceable
       class="parameter">expression</replaceable> across all input
       values
      </entry>
     </row>
7046

7047 7048 7049 7050 7051 7052 7053 7054 7055 7056 7057 7058 7059 7060 7061 7062 7063 7064
     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>standard deviation</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>stddev(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>smallint</type>, <type>integer</type>,
       <type>bigint</type>, <type>real</type>, <type>double
       precision</type>, or <type>numeric</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>double precision</type> for floating-point arguments,
       otherwise <type>numeric</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>sample standard deviation of the input values</entry>
     </row>
7065

7066 7067 7068 7069 7070 7071 7072 7073 7074 7075 7076 7077 7078 7079 7080 7081 7082
     <row>
      <entry><function>sum(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</function></entry>
      <entry>
       <type>smallint</type>, <type>integer</type>,
       <type>bigint</type>, <type>real</type>, <type>double
       precision</type>, <type>numeric</type>, or
       <type>interval</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>bigint</type> for <type>smallint</type> or
       <type>integer</type> arguments, <type>numeric</type> for
       <type>bigint</type> arguments, <type>double precision</type>
       for floating-point arguments, otherwise the same as the
       argument data type
      </entry>
      <entry>sum of <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> across all input values</entry>
     </row>
7083

7084 7085 7086 7087 7088 7089 7090 7091 7092 7093 7094 7095 7096 7097 7098 7099 7100 7101
     <row>
      <entry>
       <indexterm>
        <primary>variance</primary>
       </indexterm>
       <function>variance</function>(<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>smallint</type>, <type>integer</type>,
       <type>bigint</type>, <type>real</type>, <type>double
       precision</type>, or <type>numeric</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>
       <type>double precision</type> for floating-point arguments,
       otherwise <type>numeric</type>
      </entry>
      <entry>sample variance of the input values (square of the sample standard deviation)</entry>
     </row>
7102

7103 7104 7105
    </tbody>
   </tgroup>
  </table>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
7106

7107
  <para>
7108 7109 7110 7111 7112
   It should be noted that except for <function>count</function>,
   these functions return a null value when no rows are selected.  In
   particular, <function>sum</function> of no rows returns null, not
   zero as one might expect.  The function <function>coalesce</function> may be
   used to substitute zero for null when necessary.
7113 7114
  </para>

7115 7116 7117 7118 7119 7120 7121 7122 7123 7124 7125 7126 7127 7128 7129 7130 7131 7132 7133 7134 7135 7136
  <note>
    <indexterm>
      <primary>ANY</primary>
    </indexterm>
    <indexterm>
      <primary>SOME</primary>
    </indexterm>
    <para>
      Boolean aggregates <function>bool_and</function> and 
      <function>bool_or</function> correspond to standard SQL aggregates
      <function>every</function> and <function>any</function> or
      <function>some</function>. 
      As for <function>any</function> and <function>some</function>, 
      it seems that there is an ambiguity built into the standard syntax:
<programlisting>
SELECT b1 = ANY((SELECT b2 FROM t2 ...)) FROM t1 ...;
</programlisting>
      Here <function>ANY</function> can be considered both as leading
      to a subquery or as an aggregate if the select expression returns 1 row.
      Thus the standard name cannot be given to these aggregates.
    </para>
  </note>
7137

7138
  <note>
7139
   <para>
7140 7141 7142 7143 7144 7145 7146
    Users accustomed to working with other SQL database management
    systems may be surprised by the performance characteristics of
    certain aggregate functions in
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> when the aggregate is
    applied to the entire table (in other words, no
    <literal>WHERE</literal> clause is specified). In particular, a
    query like
7147
<programlisting>
7148
SELECT min(col) FROM sometable;
7149
</programlisting>
7150 7151 7152 7153 7154 7155 7156
    will be executed by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> using a
    sequential scan of the entire table. Other database systems may
    optimize queries of this form to use an index on the column, if
    one is available. Similarly, the aggregate functions
    <function>max()</function> and <function>count()</function> always
    require a sequential scan if applied to the entire table in
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
7157 7158
   </para>

7159
   <para>
7160 7161 7162 7163 7164 7165 7166
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> cannot easily implement this
    optimization because it also allows for user-defined aggregate
    queries. Since <function>min()</function>,
    <function>max()</function>, and <function>count()</function> are
    defined using a generic API for aggregate functions, there is no
    provision for special-casing the execution of these functions
    under certain circumstances.
7167 7168 7169
   </para>

   <para>
7170 7171 7172 7173 7174
    Fortunately, there is a simple workaround for
    <function>min()</function> and <function>max()</function>. The
    query shown below is equivalent to the query above, except that it
    can take advantage of a B-tree index if there is one present on
    the column in question.
7175
<programlisting>
7176
SELECT col FROM sometable ORDER BY col ASC LIMIT 1;
7177
</programlisting>
7178 7179 7180
    A similar query (obtained by substituting <literal>DESC</literal>
    for <literal>ASC</literal> in the query above) can be used in the
    place of <function>max()</function>).
7181 7182 7183
   </para>

   <para>
7184 7185 7186
    Unfortunately, there is no similarly trivial query that can be
    used to improve the performance of <function>count()</function>
    when applied to the entire table.
7187
   </para>
7188
  </note>
7189

7190
 </sect1>
7191

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Bruce Momjian 已提交
7192

7193 7194
 <sect1 id="functions-subquery">
  <title>Subquery Expressions</title>
7195

7196 7197 7198
  <indexterm>
   <primary>EXISTS</primary>
  </indexterm>
7199

7200 7201 7202
  <indexterm>
   <primary>IN</primary>
  </indexterm>
7203

7204 7205 7206
  <indexterm>
   <primary>NOT IN</primary>
  </indexterm>
7207

7208 7209 7210
  <indexterm>
   <primary>ANY</primary>
  </indexterm>
7211

7212 7213 7214
  <indexterm>
   <primary>ALL</primary>
  </indexterm>
7215

7216 7217 7218 7219 7220 7221 7222 7223 7224 7225 7226 7227 7228 7229 7230 7231 7232 7233 7234 7235 7236 7237 7238 7239 7240 7241 7242 7243 7244 7245
  <indexterm>
   <primary>SOME</primary>
  </indexterm>

  <indexterm>
   <primary>subquery</primary>
  </indexterm>

  <para>
   This section describes the <acronym>SQL</acronym>-compliant subquery
   expressions available in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
   All of the expression forms documented in this section return
   Boolean (true/false) results.
  </para>

  <sect2>
   <title><literal>EXISTS</literal></title>

<synopsis>
EXISTS ( <replaceable>subquery</replaceable> )
</synopsis>

  <para>
   The argument of <token>EXISTS</token> is an arbitrary <command>SELECT</> statement,
   or <firstterm>subquery</firstterm>.  The
   subquery is evaluated to determine whether it returns any rows.
   If it returns at least one row, the result of <token>EXISTS</token> is
   <quote>true</>; if the subquery returns no rows, the result of <token>EXISTS</token> 
   is <quote>false</>.
  </para>
7246

7247 7248 7249 7250
  <para>
   The subquery can refer to variables from the surrounding query,
   which will act as constants during any one evaluation of the subquery.
  </para>
7251

7252 7253 7254 7255 7256 7257 7258
  <para>
   The subquery will generally only be executed far enough to determine
   whether at least one row is returned, not all the way to completion.
   It is unwise to write a subquery that has any side effects (such as
   calling sequence functions); whether the side effects occur or not
   may be difficult to predict.
  </para>
7259

7260 7261 7262 7263 7264 7265 7266 7267
  <para>
   Since the result depends only on whether any rows are returned,
   and not on the contents of those rows, the output list of the
   subquery is normally uninteresting.  A common coding convention is
   to write all <literal>EXISTS</> tests in the form
   <literal>EXISTS(SELECT 1 WHERE ...)</literal>.  There are exceptions to
   this rule however, such as subqueries that use <token>INTERSECT</token>.
  </para>
7268

7269 7270 7271 7272 7273 7274 7275 7276 7277 7278
  <para>
   This simple example is like an inner join on <literal>col2</>, but
   it produces at most one output row for each <literal>tab1</> row,
   even if there are multiple matching <literal>tab2</> rows:
<screen>
SELECT col1 FROM tab1
    WHERE EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM tab2 WHERE col2 = tab1.col2);
</screen>
  </para>
  </sect2>
7279

7280 7281
  <sect2>
   <title><literal>IN</literal></title>
7282

7283 7284 7285
<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IN (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7286

7287 7288 7289 7290 7291 7292 7293 7294
  <para>
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly one column.  The left-hand expression
   is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result.
   The result of <token>IN</token> is <quote>true</> if any equal subquery row is found.
   The result is <quote>false</> if no equal row is found (including the special
   case where the subquery returns no rows).
  </para>
7295

7296 7297 7298 7299 7300 7301 7302
  <para>
   Note that if the left-hand expression yields null, or if there are
   no equal right-hand values and at least one right-hand row yields
   null, the result of the <token>IN</token> construct will be null, not false.
   This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
   of null values.
  </para>
7303

7304 7305 7306 7307 7308 7309 7310 7311
  <para>
   As with <token>EXISTS</token>, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
   be evaluated completely.
  </para>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> IN (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
J
Joe Conway 已提交
7312

7313
  <para>
7314 7315 7316 7317 7318 7319 7320 7321 7322
   The left-hand side of this form of <token>IN</token> is a row constructor,
   as described in <xref linkend="sql-syntax-row-constructors">.
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
   expressions in the left-hand row.  The left-hand expressions are
   evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result.
   The result of <token>IN</token> is <quote>true</> if any equal subquery row is found.
   The result is <quote>false</> if no equal row is found (including the special
   case where the subquery returns no rows).
7323 7324
  </para>

7325 7326 7327 7328 7329 7330 7331 7332 7333 7334
  <para>
   As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
   the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions.  Two rows are considered
   equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
   are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
   otherwise the result of that row comparison is unknown (null).
   If all the row results are either unequal or null, with at least one null,
   then the result of <token>IN</token> is null.
  </para>
  </sect2>
7335

7336 7337 7338 7339 7340 7341
  <sect2>
   <title><literal>NOT IN </literal></title>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> NOT IN (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7342

7343
  <para>
7344 7345 7346 7347 7348 7349
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly one column.  The left-hand expression
   is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result.
   The result of <token>NOT IN</token> is <quote>true</> if only unequal subquery rows
   are found (including the special case where the subquery returns no rows).
   The result is <quote>false</> if any equal row is found.
7350 7351 7352
  </para>

  <para>
7353 7354 7355 7356 7357 7358 7359 7360 7361 7362 7363 7364 7365 7366 7367 7368 7369 7370 7371 7372 7373 7374 7375 7376 7377 7378
   Note that if the left-hand expression yields null, or if there are
   no equal right-hand values and at least one right-hand row yields
   null, the result of the <token>NOT IN</token> construct will be null, not true.
   This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
   of null values.
  </para>

  <para>
   As with <token>EXISTS</token>, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
   be evaluated completely.
  </para>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> NOT IN (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>

  <para>
   The left-hand side of this form of <token>NOT IN</token> is a row constructor,
   as described in <xref linkend="sql-syntax-row-constructors">.
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
   expressions in the left-hand row.  The left-hand expressions are
   evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result.
   The result of <token>NOT IN</token> is <quote>true</> if only unequal subquery rows
   are found (including the special case where the subquery returns no rows).
   The result is <quote>false</> if any equal row is found.
7379 7380
  </para>

J
Joe Conway 已提交
7381
  <para>
7382 7383 7384 7385 7386 7387 7388
   As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
   the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions.  Two rows are considered
   equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
   are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
   otherwise the result of that row comparison is unknown (null).
   If all the row results are either unequal or null, with at least one null,
   then the result of <token>NOT IN</token> is null.
J
Joe Conway 已提交
7389
  </para>
7390
  </sect2>
J
Joe Conway 已提交
7391

7392 7393
  <sect2>
   <title><literal>ANY</literal>/<literal>SOME</literal></title>
7394

7395 7396 7397 7398
<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> ANY (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> SOME (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7399

7400 7401 7402 7403 7404 7405 7406 7407 7408 7409
  <para>
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly one column.  The left-hand expression
   is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result using the
   given <replaceable>operator</replaceable>, which must yield a Boolean
   result.
   The result of <token>ANY</token> is <quote>true</> if any true result is obtained.
   The result is <quote>false</> if no true result is found (including the special
   case where the subquery returns no rows).
  </para>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
7410

7411 7412 7413 7414
  <para>
   <token>SOME</token> is a synonym for <token>ANY</token>.
   <token>IN</token> is equivalent to <literal>= ANY</literal>.
  </para>
7415

7416 7417 7418 7419 7420 7421 7422
  <para>
   Note that if there are no successes and at least one right-hand row yields
   null for the operator's result, the result of the <token>ANY</token> construct
   will be null, not false.
   This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
   of null values.
  </para>
7423

7424 7425 7426 7427
  <para>
   As with <token>EXISTS</token>, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
   be evaluated completely.
  </para>
7428

7429 7430 7431 7432
<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</> ANY (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</> SOME (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7433

7434 7435 7436 7437 7438 7439 7440 7441 7442 7443 7444 7445 7446 7447 7448
  <para>
   The left-hand side of this form of <token>ANY</token> is a row constructor,
   as described in <xref linkend="sql-syntax-row-constructors">.
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
   expressions in the left-hand row.  The left-hand expressions are
   evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result,
   using the given <replaceable>operator</replaceable>.  Presently,
   only <literal>=</literal> and <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> operators are allowed
   in row-wise <token>ANY</token> constructs.
   The result of <token>ANY</token> is <quote>true</> if any equal or unequal row is
   found, respectively.
   The result is <quote>false</> if no such row is found (including the special
   case where the subquery returns no rows).
  </para>
7449

7450 7451 7452 7453 7454 7455 7456 7457 7458 7459
  <para>
   As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
   the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions.  Two rows are considered
   equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
   are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
   otherwise the result of that row comparison is unknown (null).
   If there is at least one null row result, then the result of <token>ANY</token>
   cannot be false; it will be true or null. 
  </para>
  </sect2>
7460

7461 7462
  <sect2>
   <title><literal>ALL</literal></title>
7463

7464 7465 7466
<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> ALL (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7467

7468 7469 7470 7471 7472 7473 7474 7475 7476 7477
  <para>
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly one column.  The left-hand expression
   is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result using the
   given <replaceable>operator</replaceable>, which must yield a Boolean
   result.
   The result of <token>ALL</token> is <quote>true</> if all rows yield true
   (including the special case where the subquery returns no rows).
   The result is <quote>false</> if any false result is found.
  </para>
7478

7479 7480 7481
  <para>
   <token>NOT IN</token> is equivalent to <literal>&lt;&gt; ALL</literal>.
  </para>
7482

7483 7484 7485 7486 7487 7488 7489
  <para>
   Note that if there are no failures but at least one right-hand row yields
   null for the operator's result, the result of the <token>ALL</token> construct
   will be null, not true.
   This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
   of null values.
  </para>
7490

7491 7492 7493 7494
  <para>
   As with <token>EXISTS</token>, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
   be evaluated completely.
  </para>
7495

7496 7497 7498
<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> ALL (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7499 7500

  <para>
7501 7502 7503 7504 7505 7506 7507 7508 7509 7510 7511 7512 7513 7514
   The left-hand side of this form of <token>ALL</token> is a row constructor,
   as described in <xref linkend="sql-syntax-row-constructors">.
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized
   subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
   expressions in the left-hand row.  The left-hand expressions are
   evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result,
   using the given <replaceable>operator</replaceable>.  Presently,
   only <literal>=</literal> and <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> operators are allowed
   in row-wise <token>ALL</token> queries.
   The result of <token>ALL</token> is <quote>true</> if all subquery rows are equal
   or unequal, respectively (including the special
   case where the subquery returns no rows).
   The result is <quote>false</> if any row is found to be unequal or equal,
   respectively.
7515 7516
  </para>

7517 7518 7519 7520 7521 7522 7523 7524 7525 7526 7527 7528 7529 7530 7531 7532 7533 7534 7535 7536 7537 7538
  <para>
   As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
   the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions.  Two rows are considered
   equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
   are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
   otherwise the result of that row comparison is unknown (null).
   If there is at least one null row result, then the result of <token>ALL</token>
   cannot be true; it will be false or null. 
  </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Row-wise Comparison</title>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>comparison</primary>
    <secondary>of rows</secondary>
   </indexterm>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> (<replaceable>subquery</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7539

7540 7541 7542 7543 7544 7545 7546 7547 7548 7549 7550 7551
  <para>
   The left-hand side is a row constructor,
   as described in <xref linkend="sql-syntax-row-constructors">.
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized subquery, which must return exactly
   as many columns as there are expressions in the left-hand row. Furthermore,
   the subquery cannot return more than one row.  (If it returns zero rows,
   the result is taken to be null.)  The left-hand side is evaluated and
   compared row-wise to the single subquery result row.
   Presently, only <literal>=</literal> and <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> operators are allowed
   in row-wise comparisons.
   The result is <quote>true</> if the two rows are equal or unequal, respectively.
  </para>
7552

7553 7554 7555 7556 7557 7558 7559 7560 7561
  <para>
   As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
   the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions.  Two rows are considered
   equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
   are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
   otherwise the result of the row comparison is unknown (null).
  </para>
  </sect2>
 </sect1>
7562 7563


7564 7565
 <sect1 id="functions-comparisons">
  <title>Row and Array Comparisons</title>
7566

7567 7568 7569
  <indexterm>
   <primary>IN</primary>
  </indexterm>
7570

7571 7572 7573
  <indexterm>
   <primary>NOT IN</primary>
  </indexterm>
7574

7575 7576 7577
  <indexterm>
   <primary>ANY</primary>
  </indexterm>
7578

7579 7580 7581
  <indexterm>
   <primary>ALL</primary>
  </indexterm>
7582

7583 7584 7585
  <indexterm>
   <primary>SOME</primary>
  </indexterm>
7586

7587
  <para>
7588 7589 7590 7591 7592 7593 7594 7595 7596
   This section describes several specialized constructs for making
   multiple comparisons between groups of values.  These forms are
   syntactically related to the subquery forms of the previous section,
   but do not involve subqueries.
   The forms involving array subexpressions are
   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions; the rest are
   <acronym>SQL</acronym>-compliant.
   All of the expression forms documented in this section return
   Boolean (true/false) results.
7597 7598
  </para>

7599 7600
  <sect2>
   <title><literal>IN</literal></title>
7601

7602 7603 7604 7605 7606 7607 7608 7609 7610
<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> IN (<replaceable>value</replaceable><optional>, ...</optional>)
</synopsis>

  <para>
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized list
   of scalar expressions.  The result is <quote>true</> if the left-hand expression's
   result is equal to any of the right-hand expressions.  This is a shorthand
   notation for
7611

7612 7613 7614 7615 7616 7617 7618 7619
<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> = <replaceable>value1</replaceable>
OR
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> = <replaceable>value2</replaceable>
OR
...
</synopsis>
  </para>
7620

7621 7622 7623 7624 7625 7626 7627 7628 7629 7630 7631 7632 7633 7634 7635
  <para>
   Note that if the left-hand expression yields null, or if there are
   no equal right-hand values and at least one right-hand expression yields
   null, the result of the <token>IN</token> construct will be null, not false.
   This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
   of null values.
  </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title><literal>NOT IN</literal></title>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> NOT IN (<replaceable>value</replaceable><optional>, ...</optional>)
</synopsis>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
7636

7637
  <para>
7638 7639 7640 7641 7642 7643 7644 7645 7646 7647 7648 7649
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized list
   of scalar expressions.  The result is <quote>true</quote> if the left-hand expression's
   result is unequal to all of the right-hand expressions.  This is a shorthand
   notation for

<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> &lt;&gt; <replaceable>value1</replaceable>
AND
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> &lt;&gt; <replaceable>value2</replaceable>
AND
...
</synopsis>
7650
  </para>
7651

7652 7653 7654 7655 7656 7657 7658 7659
  <para>
   Note that if the left-hand expression yields null, or if there are
   no equal right-hand values and at least one right-hand expression yields
   null, the result of the <token>NOT IN</token> construct will be null, not true
   as one might naively expect.
   This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
   of null values.
  </para>
7660

7661 7662 7663 7664 7665 7666 7667 7668 7669
  <tip>
  <para>
   <literal>x NOT IN y</literal> is equivalent to <literal>NOT (x IN y)</literal> in all
   cases.  However, null values are much more likely to trip up the novice when
   working with <token>NOT IN</token> than when working with <token>IN</token>.
   It's best to express your condition positively if possible.
  </para>
  </tip>
  </sect2>
7670

7671 7672
  <sect2>
   <title><literal>ANY</literal>/<literal>SOME</literal> (array)</title>
7673

7674 7675 7676 7677
<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> ANY (<replaceable>array expression</replaceable>)
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> SOME (<replaceable>array expression</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
7678

7679 7680 7681 7682 7683 7684 7685 7686 7687 7688 7689
  <para>
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized expression, which must yield an
   array value.
   The left-hand expression
   is evaluated and compared to each element of the array using the
   given <replaceable>operator</replaceable>, which must yield a Boolean
   result.
   The result of <token>ANY</token> is <quote>true</> if any true result is obtained.
   The result is <quote>false</> if no true result is found (including the special
   case where the array has zero elements).
  </para>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
7690

7691 7692 7693 7694
  <para>
   <token>SOME</token> is a synonym for <token>ANY</token>.
  </para>
  </sect2>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
7695

7696 7697
  <sect2>
   <title><literal>ALL</literal> (array)</title>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
7698

7699 7700 7701
<synopsis>
<replaceable>expression</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> ALL (<replaceable>array expression</replaceable>)
</synopsis>
7702

7703 7704 7705 7706 7707 7708 7709 7710 7711 7712 7713 7714 7715 7716 7717 7718 7719 7720 7721 7722 7723 7724 7725 7726 7727 7728 7729 7730 7731 7732 7733 7734 7735 7736 7737 7738 7739 7740 7741 7742 7743 7744 7745 7746 7747 7748 7749 7750 7751 7752 7753 7754 7755 7756
  <para>
   The right-hand side is a parenthesized expression, which must yield an
   array value.
   The left-hand expression
   is evaluated and compared to each element of the array using the
   given <replaceable>operator</replaceable>, which must yield a Boolean
   result.
   The result of <token>ALL</token> is <quote>true</> if all comparisons yield true
   (including the special case where the array has zero elements).
   The result is <quote>false</> if any false result is found.
  </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Row-wise Comparison</title>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> <replaceable>operator</replaceable> <replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable>
</synopsis>

  <para>
   Each side is a row constructor,
   as described in <xref linkend="sql-syntax-row-constructors">.
   The two row values must have the same number of fields.
   Each side is evaluated and they are compared row-wise.
   Presently, only <literal>=</literal> and <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> operators are allowed
   in row-wise comparisons.
   The result is <quote>true</> if the two rows are equal or unequal, respectively.
  </para>

  <para>
   As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
   the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions.  Two rows are considered
   equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
   are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
   otherwise the result of the row comparison is unknown (null).
  </para>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> IS DISTINCT FROM <replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable>
</synopsis>

  <para>
   This construct is similar to a <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> row comparison,
   but it does not yield null for null inputs.  Instead, any null value is
   considered unequal to (distinct from) any non-null value, and any two
   nulls are considered equal (not distinct).  Thus the result will always
   be either true or false, never null.
  </para>

<synopsis>
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> IS NULL
<replaceable>row_constructor</replaceable> IS NOT NULL
</synopsis>
7757

7758 7759 7760 7761
  <para>
   These constructs test a row value for null or not null.  A row value
   is considered not null if it has at least one field that is not null.
  </para>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
7762

7763 7764
  </sect2>
 </sect1>
7765

7766 7767 7768 7769 7770 7771 7772 7773 7774 7775 7776 7777 7778
 <sect1 id="functions-srf">
  <title>Set Returning Functions</title>

  <indexterm zone="functions-srf">
   <primary>set returning functions</primary>
   <secondary>functions</secondary>
  </indexterm>

  <para>
   This section describes functions that possibly return more than one row.
   Currently the only functions in this class are series generating functions,
   as detailed in <xref linkend="functions-srf-series">.
  </para>
7779

7780 7781 7782 7783
  <table id="functions-srf-series">
   <title>Series Generating Functions</title>
   <tgroup cols="4">
    <thead>
7784
     <row>
7785 7786 7787 7788
      <entry>Function</entry>
      <entry>Argument Type</entry>
      <entry>Return Type</entry>
      <entry>Description</entry>
7789
     </row>
7790
    </thead>
7791

7792
    <tbody>
7793
     <row>
7794 7795 7796
      <entry><literal><function>generate_series</function>(<parameter>start</parameter>, <parameter>stop</parameter>)</literal></entry>
      <entry><type>int</type> or <type>bigint</type></entry>
      <entry><type>setof int</type> or <type>setof bigint</type> (same as argument type)</entry>
7797
      <entry>
7798 7799
       Generate a series of values, from <parameter>start</parameter> to <parameter>stop</parameter>
       with a step size of one.
7800 7801 7802 7803
      </entry>
     </row>

     <row>
7804 7805 7806
      <entry><literal><function>generate_series</function>(<parameter>start</parameter>, <parameter>stop</parameter>, <parameter>step</parameter>)</literal></entry>
      <entry><type>int</type> or <type>bigint</type></entry>
      <entry><type>setof int</type> or <type>setof bigint</type> (same as argument type)</entry>
7807
      <entry>
7808 7809
       Generate a series of values, from <parameter>start</parameter> to <parameter>stop</parameter>
       with a step size of <parameter>step</parameter>.
7810 7811 7812 7813 7814 7815
      </entry>
     </row>

    </tbody>
   </tgroup>
  </table>
7816

7817
  <para>
7818 7819 7820 7821 7822 7823
   When <parameter>step</parameter> is positive, zero rows are returned if
   <parameter>start</parameter> is greater than <parameter>stop</parameter>.
   Conversely, when <parameter>step</parameter> is negative, zero rows are
   returned if <parameter>start</parameter> is less than <parameter>stop</parameter>.
   Zero rows are also returned for <literal>NULL</literal> inputs. It is an error
   for <parameter>step</parameter> to be zero. Some examples follow:
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
7824
<programlisting>
7825 7826 7827 7828 7829 7830 7831
select * from generate_series(2,4);
 generate_series
-----------------
               2
               3
               4
(3 rows)
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
7832

7833 7834 7835 7836 7837 7838 7839
select * from generate_series(5,1,-2);
 generate_series
-----------------
               5
               3
               1
(3 rows)
7840

7841 7842 7843 7844
select * from generate_series(4,3);
 generate_series
-----------------
(0 rows)
7845

7846 7847 7848 7849 7850 7851 7852
select current_date + s.a as dates from generate_series(0,14,7) as s(a);
   dates
------------
 2004-02-05
 2004-02-12
 2004-02-19
(3 rows)
7853
</programlisting>
7854
  </para>
7855
 </sect1>
7856

7857 7858
 <sect1 id="functions-info">
  <title>System Information Functions</title>
7859

7860 7861 7862 7863
  <para>
   <xref linkend="functions-info-session-table"> shows several
   functions that extract session and system information.
  </para>
7864

7865 7866 7867 7868 7869 7870
   <table id="functions-info-session-table">
    <title>Session Information Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry></row>
     </thead>
7871

7872 7873 7874 7875 7876 7877
     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry><function>current_database()</function></entry>
       <entry><type>name</type></entry>
       <entry>name of current database</entry>
      </row>
7878

7879 7880 7881 7882 7883
      <row>
       <entry><function>current_schema()</function></entry>
       <entry><type>name</type></entry>
       <entry>name of current schema</entry>
      </row>
7884

7885 7886 7887 7888 7889
      <row>
       <entry><function>current_schemas(boolean)</function></entry>
       <entry><type>name[]</type></entry>
       <entry>names of schemas in search path optionally including implicit schemas</entry>
      </row>
7890

7891 7892 7893 7894 7895
      <row>
       <entry><function>current_user</function></entry>
       <entry><type>name</type></entry>
       <entry>user name of current execution context</entry>
      </row>
7896

7897 7898 7899 7900 7901
      <row>
       <entry><function>inet_client_addr()</function></entry>
       <entry><type>inet</type></entry>
       <entry>address of the remote connection</entry>
      </row>
7902

7903 7904 7905 7906 7907
      <row>
       <entry><function>inet_client_port()</function></entry>
       <entry><type>int4</type></entry>
       <entry>port of the remote connection</entry>
      </row>
7908

7909 7910 7911 7912 7913
      <row>
       <entry><function>inet_server_addr()</function></entry>
       <entry><type>inet</type></entry>
       <entry>address of the local connection</entry>
      </row>
7914

7915 7916 7917 7918 7919
      <row>
       <entry><function>inet_server_port()</function></entry>
       <entry><type>int4</type></entry>
       <entry>port of the local connection</entry>
      </row>
7920

7921 7922 7923 7924 7925
      <row>
       <entry><function>session_user</function></entry>
       <entry><type>name</type></entry>
       <entry>session user name</entry>
      </row>
7926

7927 7928 7929 7930 7931
      <row>
       <entry><function>user</function></entry>
       <entry><type>name</type></entry>
       <entry>equivalent to <function>current_user</function></entry>
      </row>
7932

7933 7934 7935 7936 7937 7938 7939 7940
      <row>
       <entry><function>version()</function></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>PostgreSQL version information</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
7941

7942 7943 7944 7945
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>user</primary>
    <secondary>current</secondary>
   </indexterm>
7946

7947 7948 7949 7950
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>schema</primary>
    <secondary>current</secondary>
   </indexterm>
7951

7952 7953 7954 7955
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>search path</primary>
    <secondary>current</secondary>
   </indexterm>
7956

7957 7958 7959 7960 7961 7962 7963 7964 7965 7966
   <para>
    The <function>session_user</function> is the user that initiated a
    database connection; it is fixed for the duration of that
    connection. The <function>current_user</function> is the user identifier
    that is applicable for permission checking. Normally, it is equal
    to the session user, but it changes during the execution of
    functions with the attribute <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal>.
    In Unix parlance, the session user is the <quote>real user</quote> and
    the current user is the <quote>effective user</quote>.
   </para>
7967

7968 7969 7970 7971 7972 7973 7974
   <note>
    <para>
     <function>current_user</function>, <function>session_user</function>, and
     <function>user</function> have special syntactic status in <acronym>SQL</acronym>:
     they must be called without trailing parentheses.
    </para>
   </note>
7975

7976 7977 7978 7979 7980 7981 7982 7983 7984 7985
   <para>
    <function>current_schema</function> returns the name of the schema that is
    at the front of the search path (or a null value if the search path is
    empty).  This is the schema that will be used for any tables or
    other named objects that are created without specifying a target schema.
    <function>current_schemas(boolean)</function> returns an array of the names of all
    schemas presently in the search path.  The Boolean option determines whether or not
    implicitly included system schemas such as <literal>pg_catalog</> are included in the search 
    path returned.
   </para>
7986

7987 7988 7989 7990 7991 7992 7993 7994
   <note>
    <para>
     The search path may be altered at run time.  The command is:
<programlisting>
SET search_path TO <replaceable>schema</> <optional>, <replaceable>schema</>, ...</optional>
</programlisting>
    </para>
   </note>
7995

7996 7997 7998
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>inet_client_addr</primary>
   </indexterm>
7999

8000 8001 8002
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>inet_client_port</primary>
   </indexterm>
8003

8004 8005 8006
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>inet_server_addr</primary>
   </indexterm>
8007

8008 8009 8010
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>inet_server_port</primary>
   </indexterm>
8011

8012 8013 8014 8015 8016 8017 8018 8019 8020 8021
   <para>
     <function>inet_client_addr</function> returns the IP address of the
     current client, and <function>inet_client_port</function> returns the
     port number.
     <function>inet_server_addr</function> returns the IP address on which
     the server accepted the current connection, and
     <function>inet_server_port</function> returns the port number.
     All these functions return NULL if the connection is via a Unix-domain
     socket.
   </para>
8022

8023 8024 8025
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>version</primary>
   </indexterm>
8026

8027 8028 8029 8030
   <para>
    <function>version()</function> returns a string describing the
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server's version.
   </para>
8031

8032 8033 8034 8035
  <indexterm>
   <primary>privilege</primary>
   <secondary>querying</secondary>
  </indexterm>
8036 8037

  <para>
8038 8039 8040 8041
   <xref linkend="functions-info-access-table"> lists functions that
   allow the user to query object access privileges programmatically.
   See <xref linkend="ddl-priv"> for more information about
   privileges.
8042 8043
  </para>

8044 8045 8046 8047 8048 8049
   <table id="functions-info-access-table">
    <title>Access Privilege Inquiry Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry></row>
     </thead>
8050

8051 8052 8053 8054 8055 8056 8057 8058 8059 8060 8061 8062 8063 8064 8065 8066 8067 8068 8069 8070 8071 8072 8073 8074 8075 8076 8077 8078 8079 8080 8081 8082 8083 8084 8085 8086 8087 8088 8089 8090 8091 8092 8093 8094 8095 8096 8097 8098 8099 8100 8101 8102 8103 8104 8105 8106 8107 8108 8109 8110 8111 8112 8113 8114 8115 8116 8117 8118 8119 8120 8121 8122 8123 8124 8125 8126 8127 8128 8129 8130 8131 8132 8133 8134 8135 8136 8137 8138 8139 8140 8141 8142 8143 8144
     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_table_privilege</function>(<parameter>user</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>table</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does user have privilege for table</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_table_privilege</function>(<parameter>table</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does current user have privilege for table</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_database_privilege</function>(<parameter>user</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>database</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does user have privilege for database</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_database_privilege</function>(<parameter>database</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does current user have privilege for database</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_function_privilege</function>(<parameter>user</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>function</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does user have privilege for function</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_function_privilege</function>(<parameter>function</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does current user have privilege for function</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_language_privilege</function>(<parameter>user</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>language</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does user have privilege for language</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_language_privilege</function>(<parameter>language</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does current user have privilege for language</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_schema_privilege</function>(<parameter>user</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>schema</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does user have privilege for schema</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_schema_privilege</function>(<parameter>schema</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does current user have privilege for schema</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_tablespace_privilege</function>(<parameter>user</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>tablespace</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does user have privilege for tablespace</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>has_tablespace_privilege</function>(<parameter>tablespace</parameter>,
                                  <parameter>privilege</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>does current user have privilege for tablespace</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
8145

8146 8147 8148 8149 8150 8151 8152 8153 8154 8155 8156 8157 8158 8159 8160 8161 8162 8163
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>has_table_privilege</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>has_database_privilege</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>has_function_privilege</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>has_language_privilege</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>has_schema_privilege</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>has_tablespace_privilege</primary>
   </indexterm>
8164

8165 8166 8167 8168 8169 8170 8171 8172 8173 8174 8175 8176 8177 8178 8179 8180 8181 8182 8183 8184 8185
   <para>
    <function>has_table_privilege</function> checks whether a user
    can access a table in a particular way.  The user can be
    specified by name or by ID
    (<literal>pg_user.usesysid</literal>), or if the argument is
    omitted
    <function>current_user</function> is assumed.  The table can be specified
    by name or by OID.  (Thus, there are actually six variants of
    <function>has_table_privilege</function>, which can be distinguished by
    the number and types of their arguments.)  When specifying by name,
    the name can be schema-qualified if necessary.
    The desired access privilege type
    is specified by a text string, which must evaluate to one of the
    values <literal>SELECT</literal>, <literal>INSERT</literal>, <literal>UPDATE</literal>,
    <literal>DELETE</literal>, <literal>RULE</literal>, <literal>REFERENCES</literal>, or
    <literal>TRIGGER</literal>.  (Case of the string is not significant, however.)
    An example is:
<programlisting>
SELECT has_table_privilege('myschema.mytable', 'select');
</programlisting>
   </para>
8186

8187 8188 8189 8190 8191 8192 8193 8194 8195 8196
   <para>
    <function>has_database_privilege</function> checks whether a user
    can access a database in a particular way.  The possibilities for its
    arguments are analogous to <function>has_table_privilege</function>.
    The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
    <literal>CREATE</literal>,
    <literal>TEMPORARY</literal>, or
    <literal>TEMP</literal> (which is equivalent to
    <literal>TEMPORARY</literal>).
   </para>
8197

8198 8199 8200 8201 8202 8203 8204 8205 8206 8207 8208 8209 8210
   <para>
    <function>has_function_privilege</function> checks whether a user
    can access a function in a particular way.  The possibilities for its
    arguments are analogous to <function>has_table_privilege</function>.
    When specifying a function by a text string rather than by OID,
    the allowed input is the same as for the <type>regprocedure</> data type.
    The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
    <literal>EXECUTE</literal>.
    An example is:
<programlisting>
SELECT has_function_privilege('joeuser', 'myfunc(int, text)', 'execute');
</programlisting>
   </para>
8211

8212 8213 8214 8215 8216 8217 8218 8219 8220 8221 8222 8223 8224 8225 8226 8227 8228 8229 8230 8231 8232 8233 8234 8235
   <para>
    <function>has_language_privilege</function> checks whether a user
    can access a procedural language in a particular way.  The possibilities
    for its arguments are analogous to <function>has_table_privilege</function>.
    The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
    <literal>USAGE</literal>.
   </para>

   <para>
    <function>has_schema_privilege</function> checks whether a user
    can access a schema in a particular way.  The possibilities for its
    arguments are analogous to <function>has_table_privilege</function>.
    The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
    <literal>CREATE</literal> or
    <literal>USAGE</literal>.
   </para>

   <para>
    <function>has_tablespace_privilege</function> checks whether a user
    can access a tablespace in a particular way.  The possibilities for its
    arguments are analogous to <function>has_table_privilege</function>.
    The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
    <literal>CREATE</literal>.
   </para>
8236 8237

  <para>
8238 8239 8240
   To evaluate whether a user holds a grant option on the privilege,
   append <literal> WITH GRANT OPTION</literal> to the privilege key
   word; for example <literal>'UPDATE WITH GRANT OPTION'</literal>.
8241 8242 8243
  </para>

  <para>
8244 8245 8246 8247 8248 8249 8250 8251 8252 8253 8254
   <xref linkend="functions-info-schema-table"> shows functions that
   determine whether a certain object is <firstterm>visible</> in the
   current schema search path.  A table is said to be visible if its
   containing schema is in the search path and no table of the same
   name appears earlier in the search path.  This is equivalent to the
   statement that the table can be referenced by name without explicit
   schema qualification.  For example, to list the names of all
   visible tables:
<programlisting>
SELECT relname FROM pg_class WHERE pg_table_is_visible(oid);
</programlisting>
8255 8256
  </para>

8257 8258 8259 8260 8261 8262
   <table id="functions-info-schema-table">
    <title>Schema Visibility Inquiry Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry></row>
     </thead>
8263

8264 8265 8266 8267 8268 8269 8270 8271 8272 8273 8274 8275 8276 8277 8278 8279 8280 8281 8282 8283 8284 8285 8286 8287 8288 8289 8290 8291 8292 8293 8294 8295 8296 8297 8298 8299 8300 8301 8302 8303
     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_table_is_visible</function>(<parameter>table_oid</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>is table visible in search path</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_type_is_visible</function>(<parameter>type_oid</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>is type (or domain) visible in search path</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_function_is_visible</function>(<parameter>function_oid</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>is function visible in search path</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_operator_is_visible</function>(<parameter>operator_oid</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>is operator visible in search path</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_opclass_is_visible</function>(<parameter>opclass_oid</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>is operator class visible in search path</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_conversion_is_visible</function>(<parameter>conversion_oid</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>boolean</type></entry>
       <entry>is conversion visible in search path</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
8304

8305 8306 8307 8308 8309 8310 8311 8312 8313 8314 8315 8316 8317 8318 8319 8320 8321 8322
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_table_is_visible</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_type_is_visible</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_function_is_visible</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_operator_is_visible</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_opclass_is_visible</primary>
   </indexterm>
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_conversion_is_visible</primary>
   </indexterm>
8323

8324 8325 8326 8327 8328 8329 8330 8331 8332 8333 8334 8335 8336 8337 8338
   <para>
   <function>pg_table_is_visible</function> performs the check for
   tables (or views, or any other kind of <literal>pg_class</> entry).
   <function>pg_type_is_visible</function>,
   <function>pg_function_is_visible</function>,
   <function>pg_operator_is_visible</function>,
   <function>pg_opclass_is_visible</function>, and
   <function>pg_conversion_is_visible</function> perform the same sort of
   visibility check for types (and domains), functions, operators, operator classes
   and conversions, respectively.  For functions and operators, an object in
   the search path is visible if there is no object of the same name
   <emphasis>and argument data type(s)</> earlier in the path.  For
   operator classes, both name and associated index access method are
   considered.
   </para>
8339

8340 8341 8342 8343 8344 8345 8346 8347 8348 8349 8350
   <para>
    All these functions require object OIDs to identify the object to be
    checked.  If you want to test an object by name, it is convenient to use
    the OID alias types (<type>regclass</>, <type>regtype</>,
    <type>regprocedure</>, or <type>regoperator</>), for example
<programlisting>
SELECT pg_type_is_visible('myschema.widget'::regtype);
</programlisting>
    Note that it would not make much sense to test an unqualified name in
    this way --- if the name can be recognized at all, it must be visible.
   </para>
8351

8352 8353 8354
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_viewdef</primary>
   </indexterm>
8355

8356 8357 8358
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_ruledef</primary>
   </indexterm>
8359

8360 8361 8362
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_indexdef</primary>
   </indexterm>
8363

8364 8365 8366
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_triggerdef</primary>
   </indexterm>
8367

8368 8369 8370
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_constraintdef</primary>
   </indexterm>
8371

8372 8373
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_expr</primary>
P
Peter Eisentraut 已提交
8374 8375
   </indexterm>

8376 8377 8378 8379 8380 8381 8382 8383 8384 8385 8386
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_userbyid</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_get_serial_sequence</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>pg_tablespace_databases</primary>
   </indexterm>
8387 8388

  <para>
8389 8390
   <xref linkend="functions-info-catalog-table"> lists functions that
   extract information from the system catalogs.
8391 8392
  </para>

8393 8394 8395 8396 8397 8398 8399 8400 8401 8402 8403 8404 8405 8406 8407 8408 8409 8410 8411 8412 8413 8414 8415 8416 8417 8418 8419 8420 8421 8422 8423 8424 8425 8426 8427 8428 8429 8430 8431 8432 8433 8434 8435 8436 8437 8438 8439 8440 8441 8442 8443 8444 8445 8446 8447 8448 8449 8450 8451 8452 8453 8454 8455 8456 8457 8458 8459 8460 8461 8462 8463 8464 8465 8466 8467 8468 8469 8470 8471 8472 8473 8474 8475 8476 8477 8478 8479 8480 8481 8482 8483 8484 8485 8486 8487 8488 8489
   <table id="functions-info-catalog-table">
    <title>System Catalog Information Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry></row>
     </thead>

     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_viewdef</function>(<parameter>view_name</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE VIEW</> command for view (<emphasis>deprecated</emphasis>)</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_viewdef</function>(<parameter>view_name</parameter>, <parameter>pretty_bool</>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE VIEW</> command for view (<emphasis>deprecated</emphasis>)</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_viewdef</function>(<parameter>view_oid</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE VIEW</> command for view</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_viewdef</function>(<parameter>view_oid</parameter>, <parameter>pretty_bool</>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE VIEW</> command for view</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_ruledef</function>(<parameter>rule_oid</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE RULE</> command for rule</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_ruledef</function>(<parameter>rule_oid</parameter>, <parameter>pretty_bool</>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE RULE</> command for rule</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_indexdef</function>(<parameter>index_oid</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE INDEX</> command for index</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_indexdef</function>(<parameter>index_oid</parameter>, <parameter>column_no</>, <parameter>pretty_bool</>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE INDEX</> command for index,
       or definition of just one index column when
       <parameter>column_no</> is not zero</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><function>pg_get_triggerdef</function>(<parameter>trigger_oid</parameter>)</entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get <command>CREATE [ CONSTRAINT ] TRIGGER</> command for trigger</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_constraintdef</function>(<parameter>constraint_oid</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get definition of a constraint</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_constraintdef</function>(<parameter>constraint_oid</parameter>, <parameter>pretty_bool</>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get definition of a constraint</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_expr</function>(<parameter>expr_text</parameter>, <parameter>relation_oid</>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>decompile internal form of an expression, assuming that any Vars
       in it refer to the relation indicated by the second parameter</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_expr</function>(<parameter>expr_text</parameter>, <parameter>relation_oid</>, <parameter>pretty_bool</>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>decompile internal form of an expression, assuming that any Vars
       in it refer to the relation indicated by the second parameter</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_userbyid</function>(<parameter>userid</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>name</type></entry>
       <entry>get user name with given ID</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_get_serial_sequence</function>(<parameter>table_name</parameter>, <parameter>column_name</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get name of the sequence that a serial or bigserial column
       uses</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>pg_tablespace_databases</function>(<parameter>tablespace_oid</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>setof oid</type></entry>
       <entry>get set of database OIDs that have objects in the tablespace</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>

8490
  <para>
8491 8492 8493 8494 8495 8496 8497 8498 8499 8500 8501 8502 8503 8504 8505 8506 8507 8508 8509
   <function>pg_get_viewdef</function>,
   <function>pg_get_ruledef</function>,
   <function>pg_get_indexdef</function>,
   <function>pg_get_triggerdef</function>, and
   <function>pg_get_constraintdef</function> respectively
   reconstruct the creating command for a view, rule, index, trigger, or
   constraint.  (Note that this is a decompiled reconstruction, not
   the original text of the command.)
   <function>pg_get_expr</function> decompiles the internal form of an
   individual expression, such as the default value for a column.  It
   may be useful when examining the contents of system catalogs.
   Most of these functions come in two
   variants, one of which can optionally <quote>pretty-print</> the result.
   The pretty-printed format is more readable, but the default format is more
   likely to be
   interpreted the same way by future versions of <productname>PostgreSQL</>;
   avoid using pretty-printed output for dump purposes.
   Passing <literal>false</> for the pretty-print parameter yields the
   same result as the variant that does not have the parameter at all.
8510 8511 8512
  </para>

  <para>
8513 8514 8515 8516 8517 8518 8519 8520
   <function>pg_get_userbyid</function>
   extracts a user's name given a user ID number.
   <function>pg_get_serial_sequence</function>
   fetches the name of the sequence associated with a serial or
   bigserial column.  The name is suitably formatted
   for passing to the sequence functions (see <xref
   linkend="functions-sequence">).
   NULL is returned if the column does not have a sequence attached.
8521 8522 8523
  </para>

  <para>
8524 8525 8526 8527 8528 8529 8530 8531
  <function>pg_tablespace_databases</function> allows usage examination of a
  tablespace. It will return a set of OIDs of databases that have objects
  stored in the tablespace. If this function returns any row, the
  tablespace is not empty and cannot be dropped. To
  display the specific objects populating the tablespace, you will need
  to connect to the databases identified by 
  <function>pg_tablespace_databases</function> and query their
  <structname>pg_class</> catalogs.
8532 8533
  </para>

8534 8535 8536
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>obj_description</primary>
   </indexterm>
8537

8538 8539 8540
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>col_description</primary>
   </indexterm>
8541

8542 8543 8544 8545
   <indexterm zone="functions-info">
    <primary>comment</primary>
    <secondary sortas="database objects">about database objects</secondary>
   </indexterm>
8546

8547 8548 8549 8550 8551 8552 8553
   <para>
    The functions shown in <xref
    linkend="functions-info-comment-table"> extract comments
    previously stored with the <command>COMMENT</command> command.  A
    null value is returned if no comment could be found matching the
    specified parameters.
   </para>
8554

8555 8556 8557 8558 8559 8560
   <table id="functions-info-comment-table">
    <title>Comment Information Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry></row>
     </thead>
8561

8562 8563 8564 8565 8566 8567 8568 8569 8570 8571 8572 8573 8574 8575 8576 8577 8578 8579 8580
     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>obj_description</function>(<parameter>object_oid</parameter>, <parameter>catalog_name</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get comment for a database object</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>obj_description</function>(<parameter>object_oid</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get comment for a database object (<emphasis>deprecated</emphasis>)</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal><function>col_description</function>(<parameter>table_oid</parameter>, <parameter>column_number</parameter>)</literal></entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>get comment for a table column</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
8581

8582 8583 8584 8585 8586 8587 8588 8589 8590 8591 8592
   <para>
    The two-parameter form of <function>obj_description</function> returns the
    comment for a database object specified by its OID and the name of the
    containing system catalog.  For example,
    <literal>obj_description(123456,'pg_class')</literal>
    would retrieve the comment for a table with OID 123456.
    The one-parameter form of <function>obj_description</function> requires only
    the object OID.  It is now deprecated since there is no guarantee that
    OIDs are unique across different system catalogs; therefore, the wrong
    comment could be returned.
   </para>
8593

8594 8595 8596 8597 8598 8599 8600
   <para>
    <function>col_description</function> returns the comment for a table column,
    which is specified by the OID of its table and its column number.
    <function>obj_description</function> cannot be used for table columns since
    columns do not have OIDs of their own.
   </para>
  </sect1>
8601

8602 8603
 <sect1 id="functions-admin">
  <title>System Administration Functions</title>
8604 8605

  <para>
8606 8607
   <xref linkend="functions-admin-set-table"> shows the functions
   available to query and alter run-time configuration parameters.
8608 8609
  </para>

8610 8611 8612 8613 8614 8615
   <table id="functions-admin-set-table">
    <title>Configuration Settings Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry></row>
     </thead>
8616

8617 8618 8619 8620 8621 8622 8623 8624 8625 8626 8627 8628 8629 8630 8631 8632 8633 8634 8635 8636
     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry>
        <literal><function>current_setting</function>(<parameter>setting_name</parameter>)</literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>current value of setting</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry>
        <literal><function>set_config(<parameter>setting_name</parameter>,
                             <parameter>new_value</parameter>,
                             <parameter>is_local</parameter>)</function></literal>
       </entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>set parameter and return new value</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
8637

8638 8639 8640
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>SET</primary>
   </indexterm>
8641

8642 8643 8644
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>SHOW</primary>
   </indexterm>
8645

8646 8647 8648 8649 8650
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>configuration</primary>
    <secondary sortas="server">of the server</secondary>
    <tertiary>functions</tertiary>
   </indexterm>
8651

8652 8653 8654 8655 8656 8657 8658
   <para>
    The function <function>current_setting</function> yields the
    current value of the setting <parameter>setting_name</parameter>.
    It corresponds to the <acronym>SQL</acronym> command
    <command>SHOW</command>.  An example:
<programlisting>
SELECT current_setting('datestyle');
8659

8660 8661 8662 8663 8664 8665
 current_setting
-----------------
 ISO, MDY
(1 row)
</programlisting>
   </para>
8666

8667 8668 8669 8670 8671 8672 8673 8674 8675 8676 8677
   <para>
    <function>set_config</function> sets the parameter
    <parameter>setting_name</parameter> to
    <parameter>new_value</parameter>.  If
    <parameter>is_local</parameter> is <literal>true</literal>, the
    new value will only apply to the current transaction. If you want
    the new value to apply for the current session, use
    <literal>false</literal> instead. The function corresponds to the
    SQL command <command>SET</command>. An example:
<programlisting>
SELECT set_config('log_statement_stats', 'off', false);
8678

8679 8680 8681 8682 8683 8684
 set_config
------------
 off
(1 row)
</programlisting>
   </para>
8685

8686 8687 8688
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>pg_cancel_backend</primary>
   </indexterm>
8689

8690 8691 8692 8693
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>signal</primary>
    <secondary sortas="backend">backend processes</secondary>
   </indexterm>
8694

8695 8696 8697 8698 8699 8700
   <para>
    The function shown in <xref
    linkend="functions-admin-signal-table"> sends control signals to
    other server processes.  Use of this function is restricted
    to superusers.
   </para>
8701

8702 8703 8704 8705 8706 8707 8708
   <table id="functions-admin-signal-table">
    <title>Backend Signalling Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>
8709

8710 8711 8712 8713 8714 8715 8716 8717 8718 8719 8720
     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry>
	<literal><function>pg_cancel_backend</function>(<parameter>pid</parameter>)</literal>
	</entry>
       <entry><type>int</type></entry>
       <entry>Cancel a backend's current query</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
8721

8722 8723 8724 8725 8726 8727 8728
   <para>
    This function returns 1 if successful, 0 if not successful.
    The process ID (<literal>pid</literal>) of an active backend can be found
    from the <structfield>procpid</structfield> column in the
    <structname>pg_stat_activity</structname> view, or by listing the postgres
    processes on the server with <application>ps</>.
   </para>
8729

8730 8731 8732
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>pg_start_backup</primary>
   </indexterm>
8733

8734 8735 8736
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>pg_stop_backup</primary>
   </indexterm>
8737

8738 8739 8740
   <indexterm zone="functions-admin">
    <primary>backup</primary>
   </indexterm>
8741

8742 8743 8744 8745 8746
   <para>
    The functions shown in <xref
    linkend="functions-admin-backup-table"> assist in making on-line backups.
    Use of these functions is restricted to superusers.
   </para>
8747

8748 8749 8750 8751 8752 8753 8754
   <table id="functions-admin-backup-table">
    <title>Backup Control Functions</title>
    <tgroup cols="3">
     <thead>
      <row><entry>Name</entry> <entry>Return Type</entry> <entry>Description</entry>
      </row>
     </thead>
8755

8756 8757 8758 8759 8760 8761 8762 8763 8764 8765 8766 8767 8768 8769 8770 8771 8772 8773
     <tbody>
      <row>
       <entry>
	<literal><function>pg_start_backup</function>(<parameter>label_text</parameter>)</literal>
	</entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>Set up for performing on-line backup</entry>
      </row>
      <row>
       <entry>
	<literal><function>pg_stop_backup</function>()</literal>
	</entry>
       <entry><type>text</type></entry>
       <entry>Finish performing on-line backup</entry>
      </row>
     </tbody>
    </tgroup>
   </table>
8774

8775 8776 8777 8778 8779 8780 8781 8782 8783
   <para>
    <function>pg_start_backup</> accepts a single parameter which is an
    arbitrary user-defined label for the backup.  (Typically this would be
    the name under which the backup dump file will be stored.)  The function
    writes a backup label file into the database cluster's data directory,
    and then returns the backup's starting WAL offset as text.  (The user
    need not pay any attention to this result value, but it is provided in
    case it is of use.)
   </para>
8784

8785 8786 8787 8788 8789 8790 8791 8792 8793
   <para>
    <function>pg_stop_backup</> removes the label file created by
    <function>pg_start_backup</>, and instead creates a backup history file in
    the WAL archive area.  The history file includes the label given to
    <function>pg_start_backup</>, the starting and ending WAL offsets for
    the backup, and the starting and ending times of the backup.  The return
    value is the backup's ending WAL offset (which again may be of little
    interest).
   </para>
8794

8795 8796 8797 8798 8799
   <para>
    For details about proper usage of these functions, see
    <xref linkend="backup-online">.
   </para>
  </sect1>
8800
</chapter>
8801

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