Function
To break out 1-dimensional arrays from n-dimensional arrays - representing leaves of the nested dimensions. (With n >= 1.)
PL/pgSQL
With a FOR
loop looping through the array:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION unnest_nd_1d(a ANYARRAY, OUT a_1d ANYARRAY)
RETURNS SETOF ANYARRAY
LANGUAGE plpgsql IMMUTABLE PARALLEL SAFE STRICT AS
$func$
BEGIN
FOREACH a_1d SLICE 1 IN ARRAY a LOOP
RETURN NEXT;
END LOOP;
END
$func$;
SLICE 1
instructs to take the 1-dimensonal arrays. (SLICE 2
would take 2-dimensional arrays.)
PARALLEL SAFE
only for Postgres 9.6 or later.
Later tests revealed this PL/pgSQL function to be fastest.
Related:
Pure SQL
Only works for 2D arrays:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION unnest_2d_1d(anyarray)
RETURNS SETOF anyarray
LANGUAGE sql IMMUTABLE PARALLEL SAFE STRICT AS
$func$
SELECT array_agg($1[d1][d2])
FROM generate_subscripts($1,1) d1
, generate_subscripts($1,2) d2
GROUP BY d1
ORDER BY d1
$func$;
This is an improved and simplified version of the function Lukas posted.
db<>fiddle here
Old sqlfiddle
Explanation
SELECT (ARRAY[[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]])[0]
returns the same as:
SELECT (ARRAY[[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]])[17]
... which is NULL
. The manual:
By default, the lower bound index value of an array's dimensions is
set to one.
0
has no special meaning as array subscript. There's just nothing there for Postgres arrays with default indexes.
Also, with two-dimensional arrays, you need two indexes to get a base element. Like:
SELECT (ARRAY[[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]])[1][2]
Result:
2
The first part of your message is a bit unclear.
SELECT array_dims(ARRAY[[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]]);
Result:
[1:3][1:3]
That's two dimensions with 3 elements (1 to 3) each (9 base elements).
If you want n-1
dimensions then this is a correct result:
SELECT ARRAY (SELECT unnest('{{1,2,3}, {4,5,6}, {7,8,9}}'::int[]))
Result:
{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}
That's one dimension. unnest()
produces one base element per row (regardless of array dimensions). Your example is just another 2-dimensional array with a missing set of curly brackets ... ?
{1,2,3}, {4,5,6}, {7,8,9}
If you want a slice of the array:
SELECT (ARRAY[[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]])[1:2]
Result:
{{1,2,3},{4,5,6}}
Or:
SELECT (ARRAY[[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]])[2:2][1:2]
Result:
{{4,5}}
To flatten the result (get a 1D array):
Read the manual here.
For very old versions
For Postgres versions < 8.4, array_agg()
is not installed by default. Create it first:
CREATE AGGREGATE array_agg(anyelement) (
SFUNC = array_append,
STYPE = anyarray,
INITCOND = '{}'
);
Also, generate_subscripts()
is not born, yet. Use instead:
...
FROM generate_series(array_lower($1,1), array_upper($1,1)) d1
, generate_series(array_lower($1,2), array_upper($1,2)) d2
...
Call:
SELECT unnest_2d_1d(ARRAY[[1,2], [3,4], [5,6]]);
Result
{1,2}
{3,4}
{5,6}