CREATE OPERATOR
CREATE OPERATOR
CREATE OPERATOR - define a new operator
Synopsis
CREATE OPERATORname
( {FUNCTION|PROCEDURE} =function_name
[, LEFTARG =left_type
] [, RIGHTARG =right_type
] [, COMMUTATOR =com_op
] [, NEGATOR =neg_op
] [, RESTRICT =res_proc
] [, JOIN =join_proc
] [, HASHES ] [, MERGES ] )
Description
CREATE OPERATOR
defines a new operator,
name
. The user who
defines an operator becomes its owner. If a schema name is given
then the operator is created in the specified schema. Otherwise it
is created in the current schema.
The operator name is a sequence of up to
NAMEDATALEN
-1
(63 by default) characters from the following list:
+ - * / < > = ~ ! @ # % ^ & | ` ?
There are a few restrictions on your choice of name:
-
--
and/*
cannot appear anywhere in an operator name, since they will be taken as the start of a comment. -
A multicharacter operator name cannot end in
+
or-
, unless the name also contains at least one of these characters:
~ ! @ # % ^ & | ` ?
For example,
@-
is an allowed operator name, but*-
is not. This restriction allows PostgreSQL to parse SQL-compliant commands without requiring spaces between tokens. -
The symbol
=>
is reserved by the SQL grammar, so it cannot be used as an operator name.
The operator
!=
is mapped to
<>
on input, so these two names are always
equivalent.
For binary operators, both
LEFTARG
and
RIGHTARG
must be defined. For prefix operators only
RIGHTARG
should be defined.
The
function_name
function must have been previously defined using
CREATE
FUNCTION
and must be defined to accept the correct number
of arguments (either one or two) of the indicated types.
In the syntax of
CREATE OPERATOR
, the keywords
FUNCTION
and
PROCEDURE
are
equivalent, but the referenced function must in any case be a function, not
a procedure. The use of the keyword
PROCEDURE
here is
historical and deprecated.
The other clauses specify optional operator optimization attributes. Their meaning is detailed in Section 36.15 .
To be able to create an operator, you must have
USAGE
privilege on the argument types and the return type, as well
as
EXECUTE
privilege on the underlying function. If a
commutator or negator operator is specified, you must own those operators.
Parameters
-
name
-
The name of the operator to be defined. See above for allowable characters. The name can be schema-qualified, for example
CREATE OPERATOR myschema.+ (...)
. If not, then the operator is created in the current schema. Two operators in the same schema can have the same name if they operate on different data types. This is called overloading . -
function_name
-
The function used to implement this operator.
-
left_type
-
The data type of the operator's left operand, if any. This option would be omitted for a prefix operator.
-
right_type
-
The data type of the operator's right operand.
-
com_op
-
The commutator of this operator.
-
neg_op
-
The negator of this operator.
-
res_proc
-
The restriction selectivity estimator function for this operator.
-
join_proc
-
The join selectivity estimator function for this operator.
-
HASHES
-
Indicates this operator can support a hash join.
-
MERGES
-
Indicates this operator can support a merge join.
To give a schema-qualified operator name in
com_op
or the other optional
arguments, use the
OPERATOR()
syntax, for example:
COMMUTATOR = OPERATOR(myschema.===) ,
Notes
Refer to Section 36.14 and Section 36.15 for further information.
When you are defining a self-commutative operator, you just do it. When you are defining a pair of commutative operators, things are a little trickier: how can the first one to be defined refer to the other one, which you haven't defined yet? There are three solutions to this problem:
-
One way is to omit the
COMMUTATOR
clause in the first operator that you define, and then provide one in the second operator's definition. Since PostgreSQL knows that commutative operators come in pairs, when it sees the second definition it will automatically go back and fill in the missingCOMMUTATOR
clause in the first definition. -
Another, more straightforward way is just to include
COMMUTATOR
clauses in both definitions. When PostgreSQL processes the first definition and realizes thatCOMMUTATOR
refers to a nonexistent operator, the system will make a dummy entry for that operator in the system catalog. This dummy entry will have valid data only for the operator name, left and right operand types, and owner, since that's all that PostgreSQL can deduce at this point. The first operator's catalog entry will link to this dummy entry. Later, when you define the second operator, the system updates the dummy entry with the additional information from the second definition. If you try to use the dummy operator before it's been filled in, you'll just get an error message. -
Alternatively, both operators can be defined without
COMMUTATOR
clauses and thenALTER OPERATOR
can be used to set their commutator links. It's sufficient toALTER
either one of the pair.
In all three cases, you must own both operators in order to mark them as commutators.
Pairs of negator operators can be defined using the same methods as for commutator pairs.
It is not possible to specify an operator's lexical precedence in
CREATE OPERATOR
, because the parser's precedence behavior
is hard-wired. See
Section 4.1.6
for precedence details.
The obsolete options
SORT1
,
SORT2
,
LTCMP
, and
GTCMP
were formerly used to
specify the names of sort operators associated with a merge-joinable
operator. This is no longer necessary, since information about
associated operators is found by looking at B-tree operator families
instead. If one of these options is given, it is ignored except
for implicitly setting
MERGES
true.
Use
DROP OPERATOR
to delete user-defined operators
from a database. Use
ALTER OPERATOR
to modify operators in a
database.
Examples
The following command defines a new operator, area-equality, for
the data type
box
:
CREATE OPERATOR === ( LEFTARG = box, RIGHTARG = box, FUNCTION = area_equal_function, COMMUTATOR = ===, NEGATOR = !==, RESTRICT = area_restriction_function, JOIN = area_join_function, HASHES, MERGES );
Compatibility
CREATE OPERATOR
is a
PostgreSQL
extension. There are no
provisions for user-defined operators in the SQL standard.