- Categories:
- Semi-structured and structured data functions (Array/Object) 
OBJECT_INSERT¶
Returns an OBJECT value consisting of the input OBJECT value with a new key-value pair inserted (or an existing key updated with a new value).
Syntax¶
OBJECT_INSERT( <object> , <key> , <value> [ , <updateFlag> ] )
Arguments¶
Required:
- object
- The source OBJECT value into which the new key-value pair is inserted or in which an existing key-value pair is updated. 
- key
- The new key to be inserted into the OBJECT value or an existing key whose value is being updated. The specified key must be different from all existing keys in the OBJECT value, unless - updateFlagis set to TRUE.
- value
- The value associated with the key. 
Optional:
- updateFlag
- A Boolean flag that, when set to TRUE, specifies that the input value updates the value of an existing key in the OBJECT value, rather than inserting a new key-value pair. - The default is FALSE. 
Returns¶
This function returns a value that has the OBJECT data type.
Usage notes¶
- The function supports JSON null values, but not SQL NULL values or keys: - If - keyis any string other than NULL and- valueis a JSON null (for example,- PARSE_JSON('null')), the key-value pair is inserted into the returned OBJECT value.
- If either - keyor- valueis a SQL NULL, the key-value pair is omitted from the returned OBJECT value.
 
- If the optional - updateFlagargument is set to TRUE, the existing input- keyis updated to the input- value. If- updateFlagis omitted or set to FALSE, calling this function with an input key that already exists in the OBJECT value results in an error.
- If the update flag is set to TRUE, but the corresponding key doesn’t already exist in the OBJECT value, then the key-value pair is added. 
- 
- For the arguments that are keys, you must specify constants. 
- When the - updateFlagargument is FALSE (when you are inserting a new key-value pair):- If you specify a key that already exists in the OBJECT value, an error occurs. - SELECT OBJECT_INSERT( {'city':'San Mateo','state':'CA'}::OBJECT(city VARCHAR,state VARCHAR), 'city', 'San Jose', false ); - 093202 (23001): Function OBJECT_INSERT: expected structured object to not contain field city but it did. 
- The function returns a structured OBJECT value. The type of the OBJECT value includes the newly inserted key. For example, suppose that you add the - zipcodekey with the FLOAT value- 94402:- SELECT OBJECT_INSERT( {'city':'San Mateo','state':'CA'}::OBJECT(city VARCHAR,state VARCHAR), 'zip_code', 94402::FLOAT, false ) AS new_object, SYSTEM$TYPEOF(new_object) AS type; - +-------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------+ | NEW_OBJECT | TYPE | |-------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------| | { | OBJECT(city VARCHAR, state VARCHAR, zip_code FLOAT NOT NULL)[LOB] | | "city": "San Mateo", | | | "state": "CA", | | | "zip_code": 9.440200000000000e+04 | | | } | | +-------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------+ - The type of the inserted value determines the type added to the OBJECT type definition. In this case, the value for - zipcodeis a value cast to a FLOAT, so the type of- zipcodeis FLOAT.
 
- When the - updateFlagargument is TRUE (when you are replacing an existing key-value pair):- If you specify a key that doesn’t exist in the OBJECT value, an error occurs. 
- The function returns a structured OBJECT value of the same type. 
- The type of the inserted value is coerced to the type of the existing key. 
 
 
Examples¶
The examples use the following table:
CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE object_insert_examples (object_column OBJECT);
INSERT INTO object_insert_examples (object_column)
  SELECT OBJECT_CONSTRUCT('a', 'value1', 'b', 'value2');
SELECT * FROM object_insert_examples;
+------------------+
| OBJECT_COLUMN    |
|------------------|
| {                |
|   "a": "value1", |
|   "b": "value2"  |
| }                |
+------------------+
Add a new key-value pair to an OBJECT value¶
Insert a third key-value pair into an OBJECT value that has two key-value pairs:
UPDATE object_insert_examples
  SET object_column = OBJECT_INSERT(object_column, 'c', 'value3');
SELECT * FROM object_insert_examples;
+------------------+
| OBJECT_COLUMN    |
|------------------|
| {                |
|   "a": "value1", |
|   "b": "value2", |
|   "c": "value3"  |
| }                |
+------------------+
Insert two new key-value pairs into the OBJECT value, while omitting one key-value pair:
dconsists of a JSON null value.
econsists of a SQL NULL value and is, therefore, omitted.
fconsists of a string containing “null”.
UPDATE object_insert_examples
  SET object_column = OBJECT_INSERT(object_column, 'd', PARSE_JSON('null'));
UPDATE object_insert_examples
  SET object_column = OBJECT_INSERT(object_column, 'e', NULL);
UPDATE object_insert_examples
  SET object_column = OBJECT_INSERT(object_column, 'f', 'null');
SELECT * FROM object_insert_examples;
+------------------+
| OBJECT_COLUMN    |
|------------------|
| {                |
|   "a": "value1", |
|   "b": "value2", |
|   "c": "value3", |
|   "d": null,     |
|   "f": "null"    |
| }                |
+------------------+
Updating a key-value pair in an OBJECT value¶
Update an existing key-value pair ("b": "value2") in the OBJECT value with a new value ("valuex"):
UPDATE object_insert_examples
  SET object_column = OBJECT_INSERT(object_column, 'b', 'valuex', TRUE);
SELECT * FROM object_insert_examples;
+------------------+
| OBJECT_COLUMN    |
|------------------|
| {                |
|   "a": "value1", |
|   "b": "valuex", |
|   "c": "value3", |
|   "d": null,     |
|   "f": "null"    |
| }                |
+------------------+