On 29/10/2019 12:23, Dave Cramer wrote:


On Wed, 23 Oct 2019 at 15:50, Mitar <mmi...@gmail.com <mailto:mmi...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    Hi!

    Bump my previous question. I find it surprising that it seems this
    information is not possible to be reconstructed by the client, when
    the server has to have it internally. Is this a new feature request or
    am I missing something?

     > I am trying to understand how could I automatically parse an in-line
     > composite type. By in-line composite type I mean a type corresponding
     > to ROW. For example, in the following query:
     >
     > SELECT _id, body, (SELECT array_agg(ROW(comments._id, comments.body))
     > FROM comments WHERE comments.post_id=posts._id) AS comments FROM
    posts
     >
     > It looks like I can figure out that "comments" is an array of
    records.
     > But then there is no way really to understand how to parse those
     > records? So what are types of fields in the record?
     >
     > I start the parsing process by looking at types returned in
     > RowDescription message and then reading descriptions in pg_type
    table.
     >
     > Is there some other way to get full typing information of the
    result I
     > am assuming is available to PostreSQL internally?



Reading the RowDescription is the only way I am aware of.


Dave Cramer

da...@postgresintl.com <mailto:da...@postgresintl.com>
www.postgresintl.com <http://www.postgresintl.com>


Perhaps I misunderstood your question, but that sounds like my average use-case for the object-relational type system & JSON/JSONB functions/types: defining nested structured types as temporary relations in my queries and spew out their hierarchical JSON representation - often as a single big field (ironically I hate storing JSON in relational databases unless I'm storing something really opaque like dashboard layouts).


EG:

SELECT
    t.relname AS t_name,
    array_to_json(ARRAY_AGG(ats)) AS fields_json
FROM
    pg_class AS t INNER JOIN (
        SELECT
            ia.attrelid AS table_id,
            ia.attnum AS column_number,
            ia.attname AS column_name
        FROM
            pg_attribute AS ia
    ) AS ats
    ON
        (t.relkind = 'r')
    AND
        (t.relname IN ('pg_type', 'pg_constraint'))
    AND
        (ats.table_id = t.oid)
GROUP BY
    t.relname


You can use subqueries and array_agg() to deepen your output tree all the way to a stack overflow, a single <whatever>_to_json() call at the top will recursively traverse and convert whatever you feed it.


In your case you can just emit your composite type as a JSON object or array thereof (types and relations are the same thing).





--
Regards

Fabio Ugo Venchiarutti
OSPCFC Network Engineering Dpt.
Ocado Technology

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