PostgreSQL Veri Türleri
Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn about PostgreSQL data types including Boolean, character, numeric, temporal, array, json, uuid, and special types.
Overview of PostgreSQL data types
PostgreSQL supports the following data types:
- Boolean
- Character types such as
char
,varchar
, andtext
. - Numeric types such as integer and floating-point number.
- Temporal types such as date, time, timestamp, and interval
- UUID for storing Universally Unique Identifiers
- Array for storing array strings, numbers, etc.
- JSON stores JSON data
- hstore stores key-value pair
- Special types such as network address and geometric data.
Boolean
A Boolean data type can hold one of three possible values: true, false or null. You use boolean
or bool
keyword to declare a column with the Boolean data type.
When you insert data into a Boolean column, PostgreSQL converts it to a Boolean value e.g., 1, yes, y, t, true are converted to true, and 0, no, n false, f are converted to false.
When you select data from a Boolean column, PostgreSQL converts the value back e.g., t
to true, f
to false and space to null.
Character
PostgreSQL provides three character data types: CHAR(n)
, VARCHAR(n)
, and TEXT
CHAR(n)
is the fixed-length character with space padded. If you insert a string that is shorter than the length of the column, PostgreSQL pads spaces. If you insert a string that is longer than the length of the column, PostgreSQL will issue an error.-
VARCHAR(n)
is the variable-length character string. WithVARCHAR(n)
, you can store up ton
characters. PostgreSQL does not pad spaces when the stored string is shorter than the length of the column. -
TEXT
is the variable-length character string. Theoretically, text data is a character string with unlimited length.
Numeric
PostgreSQL provides two distinct types of numbers:
- integers
- floating-point numbers
Integer
There are three kinds of integers in PostgreSQL:
- Small integer (
SMALLINT
) is 2-byte signed integer that has a range from -32,768 to 32,767. - Integer (
INT
) is a 4-byte integer that has a range from -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647. - Serial is the same as integer except that PostgreSQL will automatically generate and populate values into the
SERIAL
column. This is similar toAUTO_INCREMENT
column in MySQL orAUTOINCREMENT
column in SQLite.
Floating-point number
There three main types of floating-point numbers:
float(n)
is a floating-point number whose precision, at least, n, up to a maximum of 8 bytes.real
orfloat8
is a 4-byte floating-point number.numeric
ornumeric(p,s)
is a real number with p digits with s number after the decimal point. Thenumeric(p,s)
is the exact number.
Temporal data types
The temporal data types allow you to store date and /or time data. PostgreSQL has five main temporal data types:
DATE
stores the dates only.TIME
stores the time of day values.TIMESTAMP
stores both date and time values.TIMESTAMPTZ
is a timezone-aware timestamp data type. It is the abbreviation for timestamp with the time zone.INTERVAL
stores periods of time.
The TIMESTAMPTZ
is the PostgreSQL’s extension to the SQL standard’s temporal data types.
Arrays
In PostgreSQL, you can store an array of strings, an array of integers, etc., in array columns. The array comes in handy in some situations e.g., storing days of the week, months of the year.
JSON
PostgreSQL provides two JSON data types: JSON
and JSONB
for storing JSON data.
The JSON
data type stores plain JSON data that requires reparsing for each processing, while JSONB
data type stores JSON
data in a binary format which is faster to process but slower to insert. In addition, JSONB
supports indexing, which can be an advantage.
UUID
The UUID
data type allows you to store Universal Unique Identifiers defined by RFC 4122 . The UUID
values guarantee a better uniqueness than SERIAL
and can be used to hide sensitive data exposed to the public such as values of id
in URL.
Special data types
Besides the primitive data types, PostgreSQL also provides several special data types related to geometric and network.
box
– a rectangular box.line
– a set of points.point
– a geometric pair of numbers.lseg
– a line segment.polygon
– a closed geometric.inet
– an IP4 address.macaddr
– a MAC address.
In this tutorial, we have introduced you to the PostgreSQL data types so that you can use them to create tables in the next tutorial.