It's absolutely possible.
ORDER BY varchar_column::int
Be sure to have valid integer literals in your varchar
column or you get an exception. (Leading and trailing white space is ok - it will be trimmed automatically.)
If that's the case, though, then why not convert the column to integer
to begin with? Smaller, faster, cleaner, simpler.
How to avoid exceptions?
To remove non-digit characters before the cast and thereby avoid possible exceptions:
ORDER BY NULLIF(regexp_replace(varchar_column, 'D', '', 'g'), '')::int
The regexp_replace()
expression effectively removes all non-digits, so only digits remain or an empty string. (See below.)
D
is shorthand for the character class [^[:digit:]]
, meaning all non-digits ([^0-9]
).
In old Postgres versions with the outdated setting standard_conforming_strings = off
, you have to use Posix escape string syntax E'\D'
to escape the backslash
. This was default in Postgres 8.3, so you'll need that for your outdated version.
The 4th parameter g
is for "globally", instructing to replace all occurrences, not just the first.
You may want to allow a leading dash (-
) for negative numbers.
If the the string has no digits at all, the result is an empty string which is not valid for a cast to integer
. Convert empty strings to NULL
with NULLIF
. (You might consider 0
instead.)
The result is guaranteed to be valid. This procedure is for a cast to integer
as requested in the body of the question, not for numeric
as the title mentions.
How to make it fast?
One way is an index on an expression.
CREATE INDEX tbl_varchar_col2int_idx ON tbl
(cast(NULLIF(regexp_replace(varchar_column, 'D', '', 'g'), '') AS integer));
Then use the same expression in the ORDER BY
clause:
ORDER BY
cast(NULLIF(regexp_replace(varchar_column, 'D', '', 'g'), '') AS integer)
Test with EXPLAIN ANALYZE
whether the functional index actually gets used.
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