Postgres json_each() function
Expands JSON into a record per key-value pair
The json_each
function in Postgres is used to expand a JSON
object into a set of key-value pairs.
It is useful when you need to iterate over a JSON
object's keys and values, such as when you're working with dynamic JSON
structures where the schema is not fixed. Another important use case is performing data transformations and analytics.
Function signature
The function returns a set of rows, each containing a key and the corresponding value for each field in the input JSON
object. The key is of type text
, while the value is of type json
.
Example usage
Consider a JSON
object representing a user's profile information. The JSON
data will have multiple attributes and might look like this:
We can go over all the fields in the profile JSON
object using json_each
, and produce a row for each key-value pair.
This query returns the following results:
Advanced examples
json_each
custom column names
You can use AS
to specify custom column names for the key and value columns.
This query returns the following results:
json_each
as a table or row source
Use Since json_each
returns a set of rows, you can use it as a table source in a FROM
clause. This lets us join the expanded JSON
data in the output with other tables.
Here, we're joining each row in the user_data
table with the output of json_each
:
This query returns the following results:
Additional considerations
Performance implications
When working with large JSON
objects, json_each
may lead to performance overhead, as it expands each key-value pair into a separate row.
Alternative functions
json_each_text
- Similar functionality tojson_each
but returns the value as a text type instead ofJSON
.json_object_keys
- It returns only the set of keys in theJSON
object, without the values.jsonb_each
- It provides the same functionality asjson_each
, but acceptsJSONB
input instead ofJSON
.
Resources
Last updated on