For example using SQL I can do:
SELECT (a+b) as c FROM table WHERE c < 5 AND (c*c+t) > 100;
Is there any way to do that using Postgres?
You cannot do that. Neither in PostgreSQL nor in standard SQL. The manual:
An output column's name can be used to refer to the column's value in ORDER BY and GROUP BY clauses, but not in the WHERE or HAVING clauses; there you must write out the expression instead.
ORDER BY
GROUP BY
WHERE
HAVING
One could debate the standard in this regard. Hugh Darwen goes to great lengths doing that in this article I was recently referred to.
You can use a subquery like Federico suggested, or a Common Table Expression (CTE) like this:
WITH cte AS (SELECT a + b AS c FROM x) SELECT c FROM cte WHERE c < 5 AND (c*c+t) > 100;
CTEs are especially useful for more complex operations or if you want to reuse the interim result in multiple (sub-)queries.
1.4m articles
1.4m replys
5 comments
57.0k users