Hi:
More, I believe so lot of people uses more common syntax, and then this syntax should to have good performance - for jsonb - (val->'op')::numeric works, and then there should not be performance penalty, because this syntax will be used in 99%.
This looks like a valid opinion IMO, but to rescue it, we have to do
something like "internal structure" and remove the existing cast.
But even we pay the effort, it still breaks some common knowledge,
since xx:numeric is not a cast. It is an "internal structure"!
I don't think "Black magic" is a proper word here, since it is not much
different from ->> return a text. If you argue text can be cast to
most-of-types, that would be a reason, but I doubt this difference
should generate a "black magic".
I used the term black magic, because nobody without reading documentation can find this operator.
I think this is what document is used for..
It is used just for this special case, and the functionality is the same as using cast (only with different performance).
This is not good, but I didn't see a better choice so far, see my first graph.
The operator ->> is more widely used. But if we have some possibility to work without it, then the usage for a lot of users will be more simple. More if the target types can be based on context
It would be cool but still I didn't see a way to do that without making
something else complex.
Maybe we can introduce some *internal operator* "extract to type", and in rewrite stage we can the pattern (x->'field')::type transform to OP(x, 'field', typid)
Not sure what the OP should be? If it is a function, what is the
return value? It looks to me like it is hard to do in c language?
It should be internal structure - it can be similar like COALESCE or IS operator
It may work, but see my answer in the first graph.
After all, if we really care about the number of operators, I'm OK
with just let users use the function directly, like
jsonb_field_as_numeric(jsonb, 'filedname')
jsonb_field_as_timestamp(jsonb, 'filedname');
jsonb_field_as_timestamptz(jsonb, 'filedname');
jsonb_field_as_date(jsonb, 'filedname');
it can save an operator and sloves the readable issue.
I don't like it too much, but it is better than introduction new operator
Good to know it. Naming operators is a complex task if we add four.
We already have the jsonb_extract_path and jsonb_extract_path_text function.
I can't follow this. jsonb_extract_path returns a jsonb, which is far away from
our goal: return a numeric effectively?
I can imagine to usage "anyelement" type too. some like `jsonb_extract_path_type(jsonb, anyelement, variadic text[] )`
Can you elaborate this please?