Hi Alvaro, On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 7:10 PM Alvaro Herrera <alvhe...@alvh.no-ip.org> wrote: > > On 2024-May-27, Alvaro Herrera wrote: > > > > JSON_SERIALIZE() > > I just noticed this behavior, which looks like a bug to me: > > select json_serialize('{"a":1, "a":2}' returning varchar(5)); > json_serialize > ──────────────── > {"a": > > I think this function should throw an error if the destination type > doesn't have room for the output json. Otherwise, what good is the > serialization function?
I remember using the reasoning mentioned by David G when testing json_query() et al with varchar(n), so you get: select json_query('{"a":1, "a":2}', '$' returning varchar(5)); json_query ------------ {"a": (1 row) which is the same as: select '{"a":1, "a":2}'::varchar(5); varchar --------- {"a": (1 row) Also, select json_value('{"a":"abcdef"}', '$.a' returning varchar(5) error on error); json_value ------------ abcde (1 row) This behavior comes from using COERCE_EXPLICIT_CAST when creating the coercion expression to convert json_*() functions' argument to the RETURNING type. -- Thanks, Amit Langote