PostgreSQL jsonb_object_agg() Function
Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL jsonb_object_agg() function to aggregate key/value pairs into a JSON object.
Introduction to the PostgreSQL jsonb_object_agg() function
The PostgreSQL jsonb_object_agg() function is an aggregate function that allows you to collect key/value pairs into a JSON object.
The jsonb_object_agg() can be useful when you want to aggregate data from multiple rows into a single JSON object or construct complex JSON output.
Here’s the syntax of the jsonb_object_agg() function:
jsonb_object_agg(key, value)In this syntax:
- keyrepresents the key for the JSON object. The key must not be null.
- valuerepresents the value for the corresponding key.
The jsonb_object_agg() returns a JSON object that consists of key/value pairs.
PostgreSQL jsonb_object_agg() function examples
Let’s explore some examples of using the PostgreSQL jsonb_object_agg() function.
1) Basic PostgreSQL jsonb_object_agg() function example
First, create a table called departments:
CREATE TABLE departments(
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    department_name VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL
);Second, insert some rows into the departments table:
INSERT INTO departments(department_name)
VALUES
   ('Sales'),
   ('Marketing')
RETURNING *;Third, use the jsonb_object_agg() function to create an object whose key is the department name and value is the id:
SELECT
  jsonb_object_agg(department_name, id) departments
FROM
  departments;Output:
departments
------------------------------
 {"Sales": 1, "Marketing": 2}
(1 row)2) Using the jsonb_object_agg() function with GROUP BY clause
First, create a new table called employees:
CREATE TABLE employees (
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    name VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
    salary DECIMAL(10, 2),
    department_id INT NOT NULL,
    FOREIGN KEY(department_id)
       REFERENCES departments(id) ON DELETE CASCADE
);Second, insert some rows into the employees table:
INSERT INTO employees (name, salary, department_id)
VALUES
  ('John Doe', 60000, 1),
  ('Jane Smith', 65000, 1),
  ('Alice Johnson', 55000, 2),
  ('Bob Williams', 70000, 2),
  ('Alex Miller', NULL , 2)
RETURNING *;Output:
id |     name      |  salary  | department_id
----+---------------+----------+---------------
  1 | John Doe      | 60000.00 |             1
  2 | Jane Smith    | 65000.00 |             1
  3 | Alice Johnson | 55000.00 |             2
  4 | Bob Williams  | 70000.00 |             2
  5 | Alex Miller   |     null |             2
(5 rows)Third, use the jsonb_object_agg() function to get the department name and a JSON object that contains employee details of the department including employee name and salary:
SELECT
  department_name,
  jsonb_pretty(
    jsonb_object_agg(e.name, e.salary)
  ) AS employee_details
FROM
  departments d
  INNER JOIN employees e ON e.department_id = d.id
GROUP BY
  department_name;Output:
department_name |       employee_details
-----------------+-------------------------------
 Marketing       | {                            +
                 |     "Alex Miller": null,     +
                 |     "Bob Williams": 70000.00,+
                 |     "Alice Johnson": 55000.00+
                 | }
 Sales           | {                            +
                 |     "John Doe": 60000.00,    +
                 |     "Jane Smith": 65000.00   +
                 | }
(2 rows)Note that we use the jsonb_pretty() function to format JSON.
Alex Miller has not had a salary yet so his salary is null. The jsonb_object_agg() also collects the null into the JSON object.
To skip nulls, you can use the jsonb_object_agg_strict() function as follows:
SELECT
  department_name,
  jsonb_pretty(
    jsonb_object_agg_strict(e.name, e.salary)
  ) AS employee_details
FROM
  departments d
  INNER JOIN employees e ON e.department_id = d.id
GROUP BY
  department_name;Output:
department_name |       employee_details
-----------------+-------------------------------
 Marketing       | {                            +
                 |     "Bob Williams": 70000.00,+
                 |     "Alice Johnson": 55000.00+
                 | }
 Sales           | {                            +
                 |     "John Doe": 60000.00,    +
                 |     "Jane Smith": 65000.00   +
                 | }
(2 rows)The jsonb_object_agg_strict() function works like the jsonb_object_agg() function except that it skips null values.
Summary
- Use the jsonb_object_agg()function to aggregate key/value pairs into a JSON object.
- Use the jsonb_object_agg()function to aggregate key/value pairs into a JSON object and skip null values.