Is it possible to copy data from column A to column B for all records in a table in SQL?
4 Answers
How about this
UPDATE table SET columnB = columnA;
This will update every row.
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2This will also work if you want to transfer old value to other column and update the first one:
UPDATE table SET columnA = 'new value', columnB = columnA
. Like other answer says - don't forget the WHERE clause to update only what's needed. Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 8:45 -
12I thinking in some complex proc doing a loop at each record when the answer is so simple Commented Apr 27, 2018 at 1:41
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8This shows the power of a declarative language! Most of us are so familiar with imperative programming languages that we forget simplicity.– codearaCommented Aug 11, 2020 at 22:02
UPDATE table_name SET
destination_column_name=orig_column_name
WHERE condition_if_necessary
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14@Mark, this actually makes sense, why is this downvoted? I had a situation where I need to copy a date value from one column to other columns, and it only applies to SOME of the columns, and not all. So having a WHERE in the statement would be necessary. Commented May 9, 2014 at 6:20
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6@finnTheHuman The question asks how to " copy data from all records" which the earlier answer answers correctly so this does not add anything– mmmmmmCommented May 9, 2014 at 11:31
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11@Mark "How does this differ from the old accepted answer", it has a WHERE clause. "so this does not add anything", I disagree, it adds something. it's a good point to include WHERE clause IF NECESSARY. we should be responsible on downvoting answers. haters gon' hate Commented May 17, 2014 at 5:33
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In my case I added a last_seen column.
UPDATE user SET last_seen = first_seen WHERE last_seen IS NULL
Commented Jan 18, 2017 at 18:57 -
...but I need a clause in mine that limits it to 100 records /s– Nick TCommented May 3, 2019 at 2:58
This will update all the rows in that columns if safe mode is not enabled.
UPDATE table SET columnB = columnA;
If safe mode is enabled then you will need to use a where clause. I use primary key as greater than 0 basically all will be updated
UPDATE table SET columnB = columnA where table.column>0;
If you want to copy a column to another column with a different data type in PostgresSQL, you must cast/convert to the data type first, otherwise it will return
Query 1 ERROR: ERROR: column "test_date" is of type timestamp without time zone but expression is of type character varying LINE 1: update table_name set test_date = date_string_col ^ HINT: You will need to rewrite or cast the expression.
An example of converting varchar to timestamp:
update table_name set timestamp_col = date_string_col::TIMESTAMP;
An example of converting varchar to int:
update table_name set int_column = string_col::INTEGER;
but any column type(except file or the similar) can be copied to string(character varying
) without cast the type.