Enumerated (enum) types are data types that comprise a static, ordered set of values. They are equivalent to the enum
types supported in a number of programming languages. An example of an enum type might be the days of the week, or a set of status values for a piece of data.
Enum types are created using the CREATE TYPE command, for example:
Once created, the enum type can be used in table and function definitions much like any other type:
The ordering of the values in an enum type is the order in which the values were listed when the type was created. All standard comparison operators and related aggregate functions are supported for enums. For example:
Each enumerated data type is separate and cannot be compared with other enumerated types. See this example:
If you really need to do something like that, you can either write a custom operator or add explicit casts to your query:
Enum labels are case sensitive, so 'happy'
is not the same as 'HAPPY'
. White space in the labels is significant too.
Although enum types are primarily intended for static sets of values, there is support for adding new values to an existing enum type, and for renaming values (see ALTER TYPE). Existing values cannot be removed from an enum type, nor can the sort ordering of such values be changed, short of dropping and re-creating the enum type.
An enum value occupies four bytes on disk. The length of an enum value's textual label is limited by the NAMEDATALEN
setting compiled into PostgreSQL; in standard builds this means at most 63 bytes.
The translations from internal enum values to textual labels are kept in the system catalog pg_enum
. Querying this catalog directly can be useful.