Postgres offers 2 operators to get a JSON member:
- the arrow operator:
->
returns type JSON or JSONB
- the double arrow operator:
->>
returns type text
We must also understand that we now have 2 different kinds of null:
- (null) postgres null type
- null json/b null type
I created an example on jsfiddle
Let's create a simple table with a JSONB field:
create table json_test (
id integer,
val JSONB
);
and insert some test-data:
INSERT INTO json_test (id, val) values
(1, jsonb_build_object('member', null)),
(2, jsonb_build_object('member', 12)),
(3, null);
Output as we see it in sqlfiddle:
id | val
----+-----------------
1 | {"member": null}
2 | {"member": 12}
3 | (null)
Notes:
- contains a JSONB object and the only field
member
is null
- contains a JSONB object and the only field
member
has the numeric value 12
- is (null): i.e. the whole column is (null) and does not contain a JSONB object at all
To better understand the differences, let's look at the types and null-checks:
SELECT id,
val -> 'member' as arrow,
pg_typeof(val -> 'member') as arrow_pg_type,
val -> 'member' IS NULL as arrow_is_null,
val ->> 'member' as dbl_arrow,
pg_typeof(val ->> 'member') as dbl_arrow_pg_type,
val ->> 'member' IS NULL as dbl_arrow_is_null,
CASE WHEN jsonb_typeof(val -> 'member') = 'null' THEN true ELSE false END as is_json_null
from json_test;
Output:
id |
arrow |
arrow_pg_type |
arrow_is_null |
dbl_arrow |
dbl_arrow_pg_type |
dbl_arrow_is_null |
is_json_null |
1 |
null |
jsonb |
false |
(null) |
text |
true |
true |
2 |
12 |
jsonb |
false |
12 |
text |
false |
false |
3 |
(null) |
jsonb |
true |
(null) |
text |
true |
false |
Notes:
- for
{"member": null}
:
val -> 'member' IS NULL
is false
val ->> 'member' IS NULL
is true
is_json_null
can be used to get only the json-null condition