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DROP AGGREGATE(7) | PostgreSQL 11.9 Documentation | DROP AGGREGATE(7) |
NAME¶
DROP_AGGREGATE - remove an aggregate functionSYNOPSIS¶
DROP AGGREGATE [ IF EXISTS ] name ( aggregate_signature ) [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ] where aggregate_signature is: * | [ argmode ] [ argname ] argtype [ , ... ] | [ [ argmode ] [ argname ] argtype [ , ... ] ] ORDER BY [ argmode ] [ argname ] argtype [ , ... ]
DESCRIPTION¶
DROP AGGREGATE removes an existing aggregate function. To execute this command the current user must be the owner of the aggregate function.PARAMETERS¶
IF EXISTSDo not throw an error if the aggregate does not exist. A
notice is issued in this case.
name
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing
aggregate function.
argmode
The mode of an argument: IN or VARIADIC. If omitted, the
default is IN.
argname
The name of an argument. Note that DROP AGGREGATE
does not actually pay any attention to argument names, since only the argument
data types are needed to determine the aggregate function's identity.
argtype
An input data type on which the aggregate function
operates. To reference a zero-argument aggregate function, write * in place of
the list of argument specifications. To reference an ordered-set aggregate
function, write ORDER BY between the direct and aggregated argument
specifications.
CASCADE
Automatically drop objects that depend on the aggregate
function (such as views using it), and in turn all objects that depend on
those objects (see Section 5.13).
RESTRICT
Refuse to drop the aggregate function if any objects
depend on it. This is the default.
NOTES¶
Alternative syntaxes for referencing ordered-set aggregates are described under ALTER AGGREGATE (ALTER_AGGREGATE(7)).EXAMPLES¶
To remove the aggregate function myavg for type integer:DROP AGGREGATE myavg(integer);
To remove the hypothetical-set aggregate function myrank, which takes an arbitrary list of ordering columns and a matching list of direct arguments:
DROP AGGREGATE myrank(VARIADIC "any" ORDER BY VARIADIC "any");
To remove multiple aggregate functions in one command:
DROP AGGREGATE myavg(integer), myavg(bigint);
COMPATIBILITY¶
There is no DROP AGGREGATE statement in the SQL standard.SEE ALSO¶
ALTER AGGREGATE (ALTER_AGGREGATE(7)), CREATE AGGREGATE (CREATE_AGGREGATE(7))2020 | PostgreSQL 11.9 |