We may be familiar with PostgreSQL's containment operator (@>
). Maybe
we've used it with an array before, so we understand the general idea. But
now we are curious about what are the other types with which this
containment operator can be used.
We can quickly find out the answer with the \do
command in psql
:
> \do @>
List of operators
Schema | Name | Left arg type | Right arg type | Result type | Description
------------+------+---------------+----------------+-------------+-------------
pg_catalog | @> | aclitem[] | aclitem | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | anyarray | anyarray | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | anyrange | anyelement | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | anyrange | anyrange | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | box | box | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | box | point | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | circle | circle | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | circle | point | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | jsonb | jsonb | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | path | point | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | polygon | point | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | polygon | polygon | boolean | contains
pg_catalog | @> | tsquery | tsquery | boolean | contains
The Left arg type
and Right arg type
columns tell us what we need to
know.
This \do
command can be used with any operator for a similar set of
information.
h/t Bruce Momjian