Answer to original question
Postgres allows set-returning functions (SRF) to multiply rows. generate_series()
is your friend:
INSERT INTO b (all_names, birthday)
SELECT names, current_date -- AS birthday ??
FROM (SELECT names, generate_series(1, number) FROM a);
Since the introduction of LATERAL
in Postgres 9.3 you can do stick to standard SQL: the SRF moves from the SELECT
to the FROM
list:
INSERT INTO b (all_names, birthday)
SELECT a.names, current_date -- AS birthday ??
FROM a, generate_series(1, a.number) AS rn
LATERAL
is implicit here, as explained in the manual:
LATERAL
can also precede a function-call FROM
item, but in this case
it is a noise word, because the function expression can refer to
earlier FROM items in any case.
Reverse operation
The above is the reverse operation (approximately) of a simple aggregate count()
:
INSERT INTO a (name, number)
SELECT all_names, count(*)
FROM b
GROUP BY 1;
... which fits your updated question.
Note a subtle difference between count(*)
and count(all_names)
. The former counts all rows, no matter what, while the latter only counts rows where all_names IS NOT NULL
. If your column all_names
is defined as NOT NULL
, both return the same, but count(*)
is a bit shorter and faster.
About GROUP BY 1
:
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