Numeric types consist of two-, four-, and eight-byte integers, four- and eight-byte floating-point numbers, and selectable-precision decimals. Table 8.2 lists the available types.
Table 8.2. Numeric Types
Name | Storage Size | Description | Range |
---|---|---|---|
smallint | 2 bytes | small-range integer | -32768 to +32767 |
integer | 4 bytes | typical choice for integer | -2147483648 to +2147483647 |
bigint | 8 bytes | large-range integer | -9223372036854775808 to +9223372036854775807 |
decimal | variable | user-specified precision, exact | up to 131072 digits before the decimal point; up to 16383 digits after the decimal point |
numeric | variable | user-specified precision, exact | up to 131072 digits before the decimal point; up to 16383 digits after the decimal point |
real | 4 bytes | variable-precision, inexact | 6 decimal digits precision |
double precision | 8 bytes | variable-precision, inexact | 15 decimal digits precision |
smallserial | 2 bytes | small autoincrementing integer | 1 to 32767 |
serial | 4 bytes | autoincrementing integer | 1 to 2147483647 |
bigserial | 8 bytes | large autoincrementing integer | 1 to 9223372036854775807 |
The syntax of constants for the numeric types is described in Section 4.1.2. The numeric types have a full set of corresponding arithmetic operators and functions. Refer to Chapter 9 for more information. The following sections describe the types in detail.
The types smallint
, integer
, and
bigint
store whole numbers, that is, numbers without
fractional components, of various ranges. Attempts to store
values outside of the allowed range will result in an error.
The type integer
is the common choice, as it offers
the best balance between range, storage size, and performance.
The smallint
type is generally only used if disk
space is at a premium. The bigint
type is designed to be
used when the range of the integer
type is insufficient.
SQL only specifies the integer types
integer
(or int
),
smallint
, and bigint
. The
type names int2
, int4
, and
int8
are extensions, which are also used by some
other SQL database systems.
The type numeric
can store numbers with a
very large number of digits. It is especially recommended for
storing monetary amounts and other quantities where exactness is
required. Calculations with numeric
values yield exact
results where possible, e.g., addition, subtraction, multiplication.
However, calculations on numeric
values are very slow
compared to the integer types, or to the floating-point types
described in the next section.
We use the following terms below: The
precision of a numeric
is the total count of significant digits in the whole number,
that is, the number of digits to both sides of the decimal point.
The scale of a numeric
is the
count of decimal digits in the fractional part, to the right of the
decimal point. So the number 23.5141 has a precision of 6 and a
scale of 4. Integers can be considered to have a scale of zero.
Both the maximum precision and the maximum scale of a
numeric
column can be
configured. To declare a column of type numeric
use
the syntax:
NUMERIC(precision
,scale
)
The precision must be positive, the scale zero or positive. Alternatively:
NUMERIC(precision
)
selects a scale of 0. Specifying:
NUMERIC
without any precision or scale creates a column in which numeric
values of any precision and scale can be stored, up to the
implementation limit on precision. A column of this kind will
not coerce input values to any particular scale, whereas
numeric
columns with a declared scale will coerce
input values to that scale. (The SQL standard
requires a default scale of 0, i.e., coercion to integer
precision. We find this a bit useless. If you're concerned
about portability, always specify the precision and scale
explicitly.)
The maximum allowed precision when explicitly specified in the
type declaration is 1000; NUMERIC
without a specified
precision is subject to the limits described in Table 8.2.
If the scale of a value to be stored is greater than the declared scale of the column, the system will round the value to the specified number of fractional digits. Then, if the number of digits to the left of the decimal point exceeds the declared precision minus the declared scale, an error is raised.
Numeric values are physically stored without any extra leading or
trailing zeroes. Thus, the declared precision and scale of a column
are maximums, not fixed allocations. (In this sense the numeric
type is more akin to varchar(
than to n
)char(
.) The actual storage
requirement is two bytes for each group of four decimal digits,
plus three to eight bytes overhead.
n
)
In addition to ordinary numeric values, the numeric
type allows the special value NaN
, meaning
“not-a-number”. Any operation on NaN
yields another NaN
. When writing this value
as a constant in an SQL command, you must put quotes around it,
for example UPDATE table SET x = 'NaN'
. On input,
the string NaN
is recognized in a case-insensitive manner.
In most implementations of the “not-a-number” concept,
NaN
is not considered equal to any other numeric
value (including NaN
). In order to allow
numeric
values to be sorted and used in tree-based
indexes, PostgreSQL treats NaN
values as equal, and greater than all non-NaN
values.
The types decimal
and numeric
are
equivalent. Both types are part of the SQL
standard.
When rounding values, the numeric
type rounds ties away
from zero, while (on most machines) the real
and double precision
types round ties to the nearest even
number. For example:
SELECT x, round(x::numeric) AS num_round, round(x::double precision) AS dbl_round FROM generate_series(-3.5, 3.5, 1) as x; x | num_round | dbl_round ------+-----------+----------- -3.5 | -4 | -4 -2.5 | -3 | -2 -1.5 | -2 | -2 -0.5 | -1 | -0 0.5 | 1 | 0 1.5 | 2 | 2 2.5 | 3 | 2 3.5 | 4 | 4 (8 rows)
The data types real
and double
precision
are inexact, variable-precision numeric types.
In practice, these types are usually implementations of
IEEE Standard 754 for Binary Floating-Point
Arithmetic (single and double precision, respectively), to the
extent that the underlying processor, operating system, and
compiler support it.
Inexact means that some values cannot be converted exactly to the internal format and are stored as approximations, so that storing and retrieving a value might show slight discrepancies. Managing these errors and how they propagate through calculations is the subject of an entire branch of mathematics and computer science and will not be discussed here, except for the following points:
If you require exact storage and calculations (such as for
monetary amounts), use the numeric
type instead.
If you want to do complicated calculations with these types for anything important, especially if you rely on certain behavior in boundary cases (infinity, underflow), you should evaluate the implementation carefully.
Comparing two floating-point values for equality might not always work as expected.
On most platforms, the real
type has a range of at least
1E-37 to 1E+37 with a precision of at least 6 decimal digits. The
double precision
type typically has a range of around
1E-307 to 1E+308 with a precision of at least 15 digits. Values that
are too large or too small will cause an error. Rounding might
take place if the precision of an input number is too high.
Numbers too close to zero that are not representable as distinct
from zero will cause an underflow error.
The extra_float_digits setting controls the
number of extra significant digits included when a floating point
value is converted to text for output. With the default value of
0
, the output is the same on every platform
supported by PostgreSQL. Increasing it will produce output that
more accurately represents the stored value, but may be unportable.
In addition to ordinary numeric values, the floating-point types have several special values:
Infinity
-Infinity
NaN
These represent the IEEE 754 special values
“infinity”, “negative infinity”, and
“not-a-number”, respectively. (On a machine whose
floating-point arithmetic does not follow IEEE 754, these values
will probably not work as expected.) When writing these values
as constants in an SQL command, you must put quotes around them,
for example UPDATE table SET x = '-Infinity'
. On input,
these strings are recognized in a case-insensitive manner.
IEEE754 specifies that NaN
should not compare equal
to any other floating-point value (including NaN
).
In order to allow floating-point values to be sorted and used
in tree-based indexes, PostgreSQL treats
NaN
values as equal, and greater than all
non-NaN
values.
PostgreSQL also supports the SQL-standard
notations float
and
float(
for specifying
inexact numeric types. Here, p
)p
specifies
the minimum acceptable precision in binary digits.
PostgreSQL accepts
float(1)
to float(24)
as selecting the
real
type, while
float(25)
to float(53)
select
double precision
. Values of p
outside the allowed range draw an error.
float
with no precision specified is taken to mean
double precision
.
The assumption that real
and
double precision
have exactly 24 and 53 bits in the
mantissa respectively is correct for IEEE-standard floating point
implementations. On non-IEEE platforms it might be off a little, but
for simplicity the same ranges of p
are used
on all platforms.
This section describes a PostgreSQL-specific way to create an autoincrementing column. Another way is to use the SQL-standard identity column feature, described at CREATE TABLE.
The data types smallserial
, serial
and
bigserial
are not true types, but merely
a notational convenience for creating unique identifier columns
(similar to the AUTO_INCREMENT
property
supported by some other databases). In the current
implementation, specifying:
CREATE TABLEtablename
(colname
SERIAL );
is equivalent to specifying:
CREATE SEQUENCEtablename
_colname
_seq AS integer; CREATE TABLEtablename
(colname
integer NOT NULL DEFAULT nextval('tablename
_colname
_seq') ); ALTER SEQUENCEtablename
_colname
_seq OWNED BYtablename
.colname
;
Thus, we have created an integer column and arranged for its default
values to be assigned from a sequence generator. A NOT NULL
constraint is applied to ensure that a null value cannot be
inserted. (In most cases you would also want to attach a
UNIQUE
or PRIMARY KEY
constraint to prevent
duplicate values from being inserted by accident, but this is
not automatic.) Lastly, the sequence is marked as “owned by”
the column, so that it will be dropped if the column or table is dropped.
Because smallserial
, serial
and
bigserial
are implemented using sequences, there may
be "holes" or gaps in the sequence of values which appears in the
column, even if no rows are ever deleted. A value allocated
from the sequence is still "used up" even if a row containing that
value is never successfully inserted into the table column. This
may happen, for example, if the inserting transaction rolls back.
See nextval()
in Section 9.16
for details.
To insert the next value of the sequence into the serial
column, specify that the serial
column should be assigned its default value. This can be done
either by excluding the column from the list of columns in
the INSERT
statement, or through the use of
the DEFAULT
key word.
The type names serial
and serial4
are
equivalent: both create integer
columns. The type
names bigserial
and serial8
work
the same way, except that they create a bigint
column. bigserial
should be used if you anticipate
the use of more than 231 identifiers over the
lifetime of the table. The type names smallserial
and
serial2
also work the same way, except that they
create a smallint
column.
The sequence created for a serial
column is
automatically dropped when the owning column is dropped.
You can drop the sequence without dropping the column, but this
will force removal of the column default expression.