Notes: For an alphabetical listing of the JSON functions and operators, see the listing in the navigation bar.
There are two trivial typecast operators for converting between a text
value that conforms to RFC 7159 and a jsonb
or json
value, the ordinarily overloaded =
operator, 12 dedicated JSON operators, and 23 dedicated JSON functions.
Most of the operators are overloaded so that they can be used on both json
and jsonb
values. When such an operator reads a subvalue as a genuine JSON value, then the result has the same data type as the input. When such an operator reads a subvalue as a SQL text
value that represents the JSON value, then the result is the same for a json
input as for a jsonb
input.
Some of the functions have just a jsonb
variant and a couple have just a json
variant. Function names reflect this by starting with jsonb_
or ending with _jsonb
—and, correspondingly, for the json
variants. The reason that this naming convention is used, rather than ordinary overloading, is that YSQL can distinguish between same-named functions when the specification of their formal parameters differ but not when their return types differ. Some of the JSON functions for a specific purpose differ only by returning a json
value or a jsonb
value. This is why a single consistent naming convention, a b
variant and a plain variant, is used throughout.
When an operator or function has both a JSON value input and a JSON value output, the jsonb
variant takes a jsonb
input and produces a jsonb
output; and, correspondingly, the json
variant takes a json
input and produces a json
output. You can use the ysqlsh
\df
meta-command to show the signature (that is, the data types of the formal parameters and the return value) of any of the JSON functions; but you cannot do this for the operators.
Check the full account of each to find its variant status. When an operator or function has both a jsonb
and json
variant, then only the jsonb
variant is described. The functionality of the json
variant can be trivially understood from the account of the jsonb
functionality.
To avoid clutter in the tables, only the jsonb
variants of the function names are mentioned except where only a json
variant exists.
Convert a SQL value to a JSON value
Function or operator | jsonb | json | Description |
---|---|---|---|
::jsonb |
yes | yes | ::jsonb typecasts a SQL text value that conforms to RFC 7159 to a jsonb value. Use the appropriate one of ::jsonb , ::json , or ::text to typecast between any pair out of text , json , and jsonb , in the direction that you need. |
to_jsonb() |
yes | yes | Convert a single SQL value of any primitive or compound data type, that allows a JSON representation, to a sematically equivaent jsonb , or json , value. |
row_to_json() |
yes | Create a JSON object from a SQL record. It has no practical advantage over to_jsonb() . |
|
array_to_json() |
yes | Create a JSON array from a SQL array value. It has no practical advantage over to_jsonb() . |
|
jsonb_build_array() |
yes | yes | Create a JSON array from a variadic list of values of arbitrary SQL data type. |
jsonb_build_object() |
yes | yes | Create a JSON object from a variadic list that specifies keys with values of arbitrary SQL data type. |
jsonb_object() |
yes | yes | Create a JSON object from SQL array values that specifiy keys with their values of SQL data type text . |
jsonb_agg() |
yes | yes | This is an aggregate function. (Aggregate functions compute a single result from a SETOF input SQL values.) It creates a JSON array whose values are the JSON representations of the aggregated SQL values. |
jsonb_object_agg() |
yes | yes | This is an aggregate function. (Aggregate functions compute a single result from a SETOF input values.) It creates a JSON object whose values are the JSON representations of the aggregated SQL values. It is most useful when these to-be-aggregated values are "row" type values with two fields. The first represesnts the key and the second represents the value of the intended JSON object's key-value pair. |
Convert a JSON value to another JSON value
Function or operator | jsonb | json | Description |
---|---|---|---|
-> |
yes | yes | Read the value specified by a one-step path returning it as a json or jsonb value. |
#> |
yes | yes | Read the value specified by a multi-step path returning it as a json or jsonb value. |
|| | yes | Concatenate two jsonb values. The rule for deriving the output value depends upon the JSON data types of the operands. |
|
- |
yes | Remove key-value pair(s) from an object or a single value from an array. | |
#- |
yes | Remove a single key-value pair from an object or a single value from an array at the specified path. | |
jsonb_extract_path() |
yes | yes | Provide the identical functionality to the #> operator. The path is presented as a variadic list of steps that must all be text values. Its invocation more verbose than that of the #> operator and there is no reason to prefer the function form to the operator form. |
jsonb_strip_nulls() |
yes | yes | Find all key-value pairs at any depth in the hierarchy of the supplied JSON compound value (such a pair can occur only as an element of an object) and return a JSON value where each pair whose value is null has been removed. |
jsonb_set() and jsonb_insert() |
yes | Use jsonb_set() to change a JSON value, i.e. the value of an existing key-value pair in a JSON object or the value at an existing index in a JSON array. Use jsonb_insert() to insert a value, either as the value for a key that doesn't yet exist in a JSON object or beyond the end or before the start of the index range for a JSON array. |
Convert a JSON value to a SQL value
Function or operator | jsonb | json | Description |
---|---|---|---|
::text |
yes | yes | Typecast a jsonb value to a SQL text value that conforms to RFC 7159. Whitesace is conventioanally defined for a jsonb operand. Whitespace, in general, is unpredicatable for a json operand. |
->> |
yes | yes | Like -> except that the targeted value is returned as a SQL text value: either the ::text typecast of a compound JSON value; or a typecastable text value holding the actual value that a primitive JSON value represents. |
#>> |
yes | yes | Like ->> except that the to-be-read JSON subvalue is specified by the path to it from the enclosing JSON value. |
jsonb_extract_path_text() |
yes | yes | Provide the identical functionality to the #>> operator. There is no reason to prefer the function form to the operator form. |
jsonb_populate_record() |
yes | yes | Convert a JSON object into the equivalent SQL record . |
jsonb_populate_recordset() |
yes | yes | Convert a homogeneous JSON array of JSON objects into the equivalent set of SQL records. |
jsonb_to_record() |
yes | yes | Convert a JSON object into the equivalent SQL record . Syntax variant of the functionality that jsonb_populate_record() provides. It has some restrictions and brings no practical advantage over its less restricted equivalent. |
jsonb_to_recordset() |
yes | yes | Bears the same relationship to jsonb_to_record() as jsonb_populate_recordset() bears to jsonb_populate_record() . Therefore, it brings no practical advantage over its restricted equivalent. |
jsonb_array_elements() |
yes | yes | Transform the JSON values of JSON array into a SQL table of (i.e. SETOF ) jsonb values. |
jsonb_array_elements_text() |
yes | yes | Transform the JSON values of JSON array into a SQL table of (i.e. SETOF ) text values. |
jsonb_each() |
yes | yes | Create a row set with columns "key" (as a SQL text ) and "value" (as a SQL jsonb ) from a JSON object. |
jsonb_each_text() |
yes | yes | Create a row set with columns "key" (as a SQL text ) and "value" (as a SQL text ) from a JSON object. |
jsonb_pretty() |
yes | Format the text representation of the JSON value that the input jsonb actual argument represents, using whitespace, to make it maximally human readable. |
Get a property of a JSON value
Function or operator | jsonb | json | Description |
---|---|---|---|
= |
yes | Test if two jsonb values are equal. |
|
@> and <@ |
yes | The @> operator tests if the left-hand JSON value contains the right-hand JSON value. The <@ operator tests if the right-hand JSON value contains the left-hand JSON value. |
|
?, ?|, and ?& | yes | (1) If the left-hand JSON value is an object, test if the right-hand SQL text value(s) exist as key name(s) in the object. (2) If the left-hand JSON value is an array, test if the right-hand SQL text value(s) exist as JSON string value(s) in the array. | |
jsonb_array_length() |
yes | Return the count of values (primitive or compound) in the array. You can use this to iterate over the elements of a JSON array using the -> operator. |
|
jsonb_typeof() |
yes | Return the data type of the JSON value as a SQL text value. |
|
jsonb_object_keys() |
yes | Transform the list of key names int the supplied JSON object into a set (i.e. table) of text values. |