Thanks for your reply.......

Honestly I do not use java and don't really know json. All I understand is that 
it is a text format that allow some customization.


However, as long as it can solve my problem, I'm happy to learn it.


now I do have a complex structure of data to store. what I'm aiming at is to:


1, orgnize the data so that it has hierarchy and structrues for people to 
operate.


2, all updates, insertion, will be recorded (including who, when, for what 
reason and which element changed from what to what).
currently I wrote a C trigger to dynamically disassemble the complex structure 
and compare them one by one and generate a string that printing out every 
change along with the update user info.


since my amount of data are not that big and the trigger is written in C, the 
final efficient is considerablly accepted. Now my question would be if json 
would be helpful on creating a relative efficient mechanism on that......


 
---Original---
From: "Charles Clavadetscher"<clavadetsc...@swisspug.org>
Date: Wed, May 23, 2018 19:29 PM
To: "'pgsql-general'"<pgsql-gene...@postgresql.org>;"'a'"<372660...@qq.com>;
Subject: RE: How do I select composite array element that satisfy specific 
conditions.


Hi

> -----Original Message-----
> From: a [mailto:372660...@qq.com]
> Sent: Mittwoch, 23. Mai 2018 11:43
> To: pgsql-general <pgsql-gene...@postgresql.org>
> Subject: How do I select composite array element that satisfy specific 
> conditions.
> 
> Hi, say if I have composite type and table
> 
> create type A as(
>      x float8,
>      y float8
> );
> 
> create table B(
>      Ay A[]
> );
> 
> insert into B
> values(array[
>      (1,2)::A,
>      (3,4)::A]
> );
> 
> How could I select the element of Ay that satisfy x=3??
> 
> Thank you so much!!
> 
> Shore

I did not really follow this thread, so I am not in clear, why you want to 
complicate your life that much.
You create a custom data type and then use it in an array in a column. A 
complex hierarchical structure.
Why don't you simply use JSON or JSONB? Your example sounds terribly academic 
very much like a school assignment.

Bye
Charles

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