Re: count() counts ROW values that are NULL
От | Erwin Brandstetter |
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Тема | Re: count() counts ROW values that are NULL |
Дата | |
Msg-id | CAGHENJ4yKo4mDLwjCN-nGqpekWZvb=rW=h+diM9Smwp7rZGqMg@mail.gmail.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: count() counts ROW values that are NULL (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>) |
Ответы |
Re: count() counts ROW values that are NULL
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Список | pgsql-docs |
On Fri, 18 Mar 2022 at 22:28, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
Erwin Brandstetter <brsaweda@gmail.com> writes:
> https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/functions-aggregate.html#FUNCTIONS-AGGREGATE-TABLE
> The manual says:
>> count ( "any" ) → bigint
>> Computes the number of input rows in which the input value is not null.
> But ROW values or composite types that "are null" are counted, anyway.
Well, there's nulls and nulls. The SQL "IS NULL" construct is fairly
badly designed IMO, because it considers both a plain NULL and a
row-of-all-NULL-fields to be "null". count(), like just about everything
in Postgres other than "IS NULL", considers only a plain NULL to be null.
This is discussed somewhere in the manual, but I think it's under IS NULL,
not under all the other places that'd have to be annotated if we decide to
annotate as you're suggesting. (One example is that functions that are
marked STRICT use the tighter interpretation.)
You could use "COUNT(*) FILTER (WHERE NOT (whatever IS NULL))" if you want
to count values meeting the IS NULL definition. (Buttressing my point
that IS NULL is not well thought out, the obvious "whatever IS NOT NULL"
doesn't work here, because it's not the inverse of "whatever IS NULL".)
I am aware of the mess, and I feel your pain (and my own).
But count(<expression>) is among the most frequently used functions, and hardly any user reading the manual will be aware of the implications. Maybe just:
... in which the input value is not null (does not evaluate to a scalar NULL).
To give them a fighting chance.
Regards
Erwin
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