Inserting Data to Tables
A new table contains no data. You need to insert data to the table before using it. This section describes how to insert a row or multiple rows of data using the INSERT command and to insert data from a specified table. For details about how to insert a large amount of data to a table in batches, see Importing Data.
Background
The length of a character on the server and client may vary by the character sets they use. A string entered on the client will be processed based on the server's character set, so the result may differ from expected.
Table 1 Comparison of character set output between the client and server
More than one of the preceding operations can be performed to a string. For example, if the character sets of the client and server are different, a string may be processed and then truncated. In this case, the result will also be unexpected. For details, see Table 2.
NOTE:
Long strings are truncated only if DBCOMPATIBILITY is set to TD (compatible with Teradata) and td_compatible_truncation is set to on.
Run the following commands to create table1 and table2 to be used in the example:
postgres=# CREATE TABLE table1(id int, a char(6), b varchar(6),c varchar(6));
postgres=# CREATE TABLE table2(id int, a char(20), b varchar(20),c varchar(20));
Table 2 Examples
Procedure
You need to create a table before inserting data to it. For details about how to create a table, see Creating and Managing Tables.
Insert a row to table customer_t1.
Data values are arranged in the same order as the columns in the table and are separated by commas (,). Generally, column values are text values (constants). But column values can also be scalar expressions.
INSERT INTO customer_t1(c_customer_sk, c_customer_id, c_first_name) VALUES (3769, 'hello', 'Grace');
If you know the sequence of the columns in the table, you can obtain the same result without listing these columns. For example, the following command generates the same result as the preceding command:
INSERT INTO customer_t1 VALUES (3769, 'hello', 'Grace');
If you do not know some of the column values, you can omit them. If no value is specified for a column, the column is set to the default value. For example:
INSERT INTO customer_t1 (c_customer_sk, c_first_name) VALUES (3769, 'Grace'); INSERT INTO customer_t1 VALUES (3769, 'hello');
You can also specify the default value of a column or row:
INSERT INTO customer_t1 (c_customer_sk, c_customer_id, c_first_name) VALUES (3769, 'hello', DEFAULT); INSERT INTO customer_t1 DEFAULT VALUES;
To insert multiple rows to a table, run the following command:
INSERT INTO customer_t1 (c_customer_sk, c_customer_id, c_first_name) VALUES (6885, 'maps', 'Joes'), (4321, 'tpcds', 'Lily'), (9527, 'world', 'James');
You can also insert multiple rows by running the command for inserting one row for multiple times. However, you are advised to run this command to improve efficiency.
Assume that you have created a backup table customer_t2 for table customer_t1. To insert data from customer_t1 to customer_t2, run the following statements:
CREATE TABLE customer_t2 ( c_customer_sk integer, c_customer_id char(5), c_first_name char(6), c_last_name char(8) ); INSERT INTO customer_t2 SELECT * FROM customer_t1;
NOTE:
If implicit conversion is not implemented between the column data types of the specified table and those of the current table, the two tables must have the same column data types when data is inserted from the specified table to the current table.To delete a backup file, run the following command:
DROP TABLE customer_t2 CASCADE;
NOTE:
If the table to be deleted is dependent on other tables, you need to delete its dependent tables first.