PostgreSQL jsonb_insert() Function
Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL jsonb_insert()
function to insert a new element into a JSON array or a key/value pair into a JSON object.
Introduction to the PostgreSQL jsonb_insert() function
The jsonb_insert()
function allows you to insert new values into a JSON document of the JSONB type.
More specifically, the jsonb_insert()
function allows you to add a new element into an array or a new key/value pair into an object, or nested combinations of them.
Here’s the syntax of the jsonb_insert()
function:
jsonb_insert(
target jsonb,
path text[],
new_value jsonb,
[insert_after boolean]
) → jsonb
In this syntax:
target
: The JSON document of the JSONB type into which you want to insert a new value.path
: This is an array of text elements that specifies the path where you want to insert the new value.new_value
is the new value that you want to insert into the JSON document.insert_after
: This is an optional boolean parameter indicating whether you want to insert the new value after the specified path instead of before. It defaults tofalse
, meaning that the function will insert a new value before the specified path.
The jsonb_insert()
function returns a new JSON document with the new_value
inserted before/after the specified path
.
PostgreSQL jsonb_insert() function examples
Let’s take some examples of using the PostgreSQL jsonb_insert()
function
1) Inserting a new element into a JSON array
The following example uses the jsonb_insert()
function to insert a new element into a JSON array:
SELECT jsonb_insert('[1,2,3]', '{0}', '0');
Output:
jsonb_insert
--------------
[0, 1, 2, 3]
(1 row)
In this example:
- The original array is
[1,2,3]
. - The path
\{0\}
indicates the first element of the array. - The number 0 is the new value.
The jsonb_insert()
function inserts the number 0 before the first element of the array.
To insert the number 0 after the first position, you set the insert_after
parameter to true as follows:
SELECT jsonb_insert('[1,2,3]', '{0}', '0', true);
Output:
jsonb_insert
--------------
[1, 0, 2, 3]
(1 row)
2) Inserting a new element into a nested JSON array
The following example uses the jsonb_insert()
function to insert a new element into a nested array:
SELECT
jsonb_insert(
'[1,2,[4,5],6]', '{2,0}', '3'
);
Output:
jsonb_insert
----------------------
[1, 2, [3, 4, 5], 6]
(1 row)
In this example:
- The original array is
\[1,2,\[3,4],6]
. - The path
\{2, 0\}
,2
specifies the second element of the array which is the nested array\[3,4]
, and0
specifies the first element of the nested array. 3
is the new value.
Therefore the jsonb_insert()
function inserts the new value 3 before the first element of the nested array.
3) Inserting a new element into a JSON object
The following example uses the jsonb_insert()
to add a new key/value pair to a JSON object:
SELECT
jsonb_insert('{"name": "John"}', '{age}', '2');
Output:
jsonb_insert
----------------------------
{"age": 2, "name": "John"}
(1 row)
In this example:
\{“name”: “John”\}
is the original object.\{age\}
is the path that indicates the age property (or key).2
is the new value to insert.
Therefore, the jsonb_insert()
inserts the age property with value 2 into the JSON object.
Note that if you attempt to insert a key that already exists, you’ll get an error. For example:
SELECT jsonb_insert('{"name": "John"}', '{name}', '"Jane"');
Output:
ERROR: cannot replace existing key
HINT: Try using the function jsonb_set to replace key value.
In this case, you need to use the jsonb_set()
function to replace the key value.
4) Inserting a new element into a nested JSON object
The following example uses the jsonb_insert()
to add a new key/value pair to a nested JSON object:
SELECT
jsonb_insert(
'{"name":"John Doe", "address" : { "city": "San Francisco"}}',
'{address,state}',
'"California"'
);
Output:
jsonb_insert
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
{"name": "John Doe", "address": {"city": "San Francisco", "state": "California"}}
(1 row)
In this example:
\{“name”:”John Doe”, “address” : \{ “city”: “San Francisco”\}\}
is the original JSON object.\{address, state\}
is a path that specifies the address key whose value is an object and state is the new key of the address object.- “California” is the value of the state key.
Therefore, the jsonb_insert()
function inserts the state with the value California to the address object of the JSON document.
Note that to beautify the output, you can use the jsonb_pretty()
function:
SELECT
jsonb_pretty(jsonb_insert(
'{"name":"John Doe", "address" : { "city": "San Francisco"}}',
'{address,state}',
'"California"'
));
Output:
jsonb_pretty
----------------------------------
{ +
"name": "John Doe", +
"address": { +
"city": "San Francisco",+
"state": "California" +
} +
}
(1 row)
5) Inserting a new element into an array of a nested object
The following example uses the jsonb_insert()
to add a new element into an array of a nested object
SELECT
jsonb_insert(
'{"name": "John", "skills" : ["PostgreSQL", "API"]}',
'{skills,1}', '"Web Dev"'
);
Output:
jsonb_insert
--------------------------------------------------------------
{"name": "John", "skills": ["PostgreSQL", "Web Dev", "API"]}
(1 row)
In this example:
\{“name”: “John”, “skills” : \[“PostgreSQL”, “API”\]\}
is the original JSON object.\{skills,1\}
is a path that specifies the skills key, which is an array, and 1 specifies the second element of the array.- “Web Dev” is the new value to insert.
The jsonb_insert()
function inserts the “Web Dev” before the second element of the skills array of the JSON object.
6) Using the PostgreSQL jsonb_insert() function with table data
We’ll show you how to use the jsonb_insert()
function to insert a new value into a JSON document and update it back to a table.
First, create a new table called employee_profiles
:
CREATE TABLE employee_profiles(
id INT PRIMARY KEY,
profiles JSONB
);
Second, insert rows into the employee_profiles
table:
INSERT INTO employee_profiles(id, profiles)
VALUES
(1, '{"name": "John", "skills" : ["PostgreSQL", "API"]}'),
(2, '{"name": "Jane", "skills" : ["SQL","Java"]}')
RETURNING *;
Output:
id | profiles
----+---------------------------------------------------
1 | {"name": "John", "skills": ["PostgreSQL", "API"]}
2 | {"name": "Jane", "skills": ["SQL", "Java"]}
(2 rows)
Third, add the “Web Dev” skill to the employee with the id 1:
UPDATE
employee_profiles
SET
profiles = jsonb_insert(
profiles, '{skills,0}', '"Web Dev"'
)
WHERE
id = 1
RETURNING *;
Output:
id | profiles
----+--------------------------------------------------------------
1 | {"name": "John", "skills": ["Web Dev", "PostgreSQL", "API"]}
(1 row)
Summary
- Use the
jsonb_insert()
function to insert a new value into a JSON document of the type JSONB.