Text Size: Normal / Large

2.4. Populating a Table With Rows

The INSERT statement is used to populate a table with rows:

INSERT INTO weather VALUES ('San Francisco', 46, 50, 0.25, '1994-11-27');

Note that all data types use rather obvious input formats. Constants that are not simple numeric values usually must be surrounded by single quotes ('), as in the example. The date type is actually quite flexible in what it accepts, but for this tutorial we will stick to the unambiguous format shown here.

The point type requires a coordinate pair as input, as shown here:

INSERT INTO cities VALUES ('San Francisco', '(-194.0, 53.0)');

The syntax used so far requires you to remember the order of the columns. An alternative syntax allows you to list the columns explicitly:

INSERT INTO weather (city, temp_lo, temp_hi, prcp, date)
    VALUES ('San Francisco', 43, 57, 0.0, '1994-11-29');

You can list the columns in a different order if you wish or even omit some columns, e.g., if the precipitation is unknown:

INSERT INTO weather (date, city, temp_hi, temp_lo)
    VALUES ('1994-11-29', 'Hayward', 54, 37);

Many developers consider explicitly listing the columns better style than relying on the order implicitly.

Please enter all the commands shown above so you have some data to work with in the following sections.

You could also have used COPY to load large amounts of data from flat-text files. This is usually faster because the COPY command is optimized for this application while allowing less flexibility than INSERT. An example would be:

COPY weather FROM '/home/user/weather.txt';

where the file name for the source file must be available to the backend server machine, not the client, since the backend server reads the file directly. You can read more about the COPY command in COPY.


User Comments


Bryan <azmode03 AT yahoo.com>
26 Aug 2006 20:26:23

On linux to COPY text files into a table: you have to first adjust SELinux in the security/firewall or else "permission denied" to even read the file.  Happens even though the world has read access to that particular file!

Pavel Vinogradov <blaze.cs AT gmail.com>
25 Oct 2006 9:55:37

On linux to COPY to or from a file you must be postgresql supeuser otherwise on
"COPY weather TO '~/weather.data';" command you receive "ERROR:  must be superuser to COPY to or from a file" answer.

Add Comment

Please use this form to add your own comments regarding your experience with particular features of PostgreSQL, clarifications of the documentation, or hints for other users. Please note, this is not a support forum, and your IP address will be logged. If you have a question or need help, please see the faq, try a mailing list, or join us on IRC. Note that submissions containing URLs or other keywords commonly found in 'spam' comments may be silently discarded. Please contact the webmaster if you think this is happening to you in error.

In order to submit a comment, you must have a community account.

* Comment
 

* denotes required field

Privacy Policy | Project hosted by hub.org | Designed by tinysofa
Copyright © 1996 – 2007 PostgreSQL Global Development Group