Is there any alternative to the PostgreSQL array_agg()
function so that it doesn't return values in the format: '{x,y,z,}'.
Can I have it return just: 'x,y,z' ?
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Erwin Brandstetter
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Lillian Milagros Carrasquillo
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3 Answers
10
In PostgreSQL 9.0 or later use string_agg(val, ',')
.
It returns a string with delimiters of your choosing.
array_agg(val)
returns an array, no surprise there. The curly braces you see are integral part of array literals - the text representation of arrays.
In older versions (or any version really) you can substitute with array_to_string(array_agg(val), ',')
.
Or, quick'n'dirty: trim(array_agg(val)::text, '{}'
- if values never start or end with curly braces.

Erwin Brandstetter
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4
If you are not on 9.0 yet (which has the already mentioned string_agg()
function) you can use array_to_string()
on the result of array_agg()
2
Use the STRING_AGG function:
SELECT
STRING_AGG(name, ',')
FROM
person;

Dave Jarvis
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Kouber Saparev
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