PostgreSQL jsonb_each_text() Function
Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL jsonb_each_text()
function to expand a JSON object into a set of key/value pairs of type text.
Introduction to the PostgreSQL jsonb_each_text() function
The jsonb_each_text()
function allows you to expand a top-level JSON object into a set of key/value pairs. Both keys and values are text strings.
The following shows the basic syntax of the jsonb_each_text()
function:
jsonb_each_text(json_object)
In this syntax:
json_object
is the JSON object that you want to expand the key/value pairs.
The function returns a set of records where each record consists of two fields key and value, both have the type text
.
If the json_object
is null, the function returns an empty set. in case the json_object
is not a JSON object, the function will issue an error.
PostgreSQL jsonb_each_text() function examples
Let’s take some examples of using the jsonb_each_text()
function.
1) Basic PostgreSQL jsonb_each_text() function example
The following example uses the jsonb_each_text
function to expand the key/value pair of a JSON object:
SELECT
*
FROM
jsonb_each_text(
'{"name": "Jane", "age": 22, "city": "San Francisco"}'
);
Output:
key | value
------+---------------
age | 22
city | San Francisco
name | Jane
(3 rows)
Notice that all values in the value column are text strings including the value 22.
To retrieve a particular key/value pair, you can filter keys in the WHERE
clause. For example, the following statement returns the name and city of the object:
SELECT
*
FROM
jsonb_each_text(
'{"name": "Jane", "age": 22, "city": "San Francisco"}'
)
WHERE key IN ('name','city');
Output:
key | value
------+---------------
city | San Francisco
name | Jane
(2 rows)
2) Using the jsonb_each_text() function with table data
First, create a new table called links
:
CREATE TABLE links (
id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
href TEXT NOT NULL,
attributes JSONB
);
In the links
table, the attributes
column has the type of JSONB
that stores various attributes of a link.
Second, insert some rows into the links
table:
INSERT INTO links (href, attributes)
VALUES
('https://example.com', '{"rel": "stylesheet", "type": "text/css", "media": "screen"}'),
('https://example.org', '{"rel": "icon", "type": "image/x-icon"}'),
('https://example.net', '{"rel": "alternate", "type": "application/rss+xml", "title": "RSS Feed"}');
Third, expand the key/value pairs of the objects in attributes
column into a set of key/value pairs using the jsonb_each_text()
function:
SELECT
href,
key,
value
FROM
links,
jsonb_each_text(attributes);
Output:
href | key | value
---------------------+-------+---------------------
https://example.com | rel | stylesheet
https://example.com | type | text/css
https://example.com | media | screen
https://example.org | rel | icon
https://example.org | type | image/x-icon
https://example.net | rel | alternate
https://example.net | type | application/rss+xml
https://example.net | title | RSS Feed
(8 rows)
Summary
- Use the
jsonb_each_text()
function to expand a JSON object into a set of key/value pairs of typetext
.