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postgresql - replace all instances of a string within text field

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How do you replace a section of a string in PostgreSQL?

In PostgreSQL, the REPLACE function is used to search and replace all occurrences of a string with a new one. Syntax: REPLACE(source, old_text, new_text );

How replace all occurrences of a string in SQL?

How to Replace all Occurrences of a String with another String in SQL Server – REPLACE() In SQL Server, you can use the T-SQL REPLACE() function to replace all instances of a given string with another string.

What is Upsert in PostgreSQL?

The UPSERT statement is a DBMS feature that allows a DML statement's author to either insert a row or if the row already exists, UPDATE that existing row instead. That is why the action is known as UPSERT (simply a mix of Update and Insert).

How do I remove a character from a string in PostgreSQL?

The LTRIM() function removes all characters, spaces by default, from the beginning of a string. The RTRIM() function removes all characters, spaces by default, from the end of a string. The BTRIM function is the combination of the LTRIM() and RTRIM() functions.


You want to use postgresql's replace function:

replace(string text, from text, to text)

for instance :

UPDATE <table> SET <field> = replace(<field>, 'cat', 'dog')

Be aware, though, that this will be a string-to-string replacement, so 'category' will become 'dogegory'. the regexp_replace function may help you define a stricter match pattern for what you want to replace.


The Regular Expression Way

If you need stricter replacement matching, PostgreSQL's regexp_replace function can match using POSIX regular expression patterns. It has the syntax regexp_replace(source, pattern, replacement [, flags ]).

I will use flags i and g for case-insensitive and global matching, respectively. I will also use \m and \M to match the beginning and the end of a word, respectively.

There are usually quite a few gotchas when performing regex replacment. Let's see how easy it is to replace a cat with a dog.

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', 'cat', 'dog');
-->                    Cat bobdog cat cats catfish

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', 'cat', 'dog', 'i');
-->                    dog bobcat cat cats catfish

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', 'cat', 'dog', 'g');
-->                    Cat bobdog dog dogs dogfish

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', 'cat', 'dog', 'gi');
-->                    dog bobdog dog dogs dogfish

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', '\mcat', 'dog', 'gi');
-->                    dog bobcat dog dogs dogfish

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', 'cat\M', 'dog', 'gi');
-->                    dog bobdog dog cats catfish

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', '\mcat\M', 'dog', 'gi');
-->                    dog bobcat dog cats catfish

SELECT regexp_replace('Cat bobcat cat cats catfish', '\mcat(s?)\M', 'dog\1', 'gi');
-->                    dog bobcat dog dogs catfish

Even after all of that, there is at least one unresolved condition. For example, sentences that begin with "Cat" will be replaced with lower-case "dog" which break sentence capitalization.

Check out the current PostgreSQL pattern matching docs for all the details.

Update entire column with replacement text

Given my examples, maybe the safest option would be:

UPDATE table SET field = regexp_replace(field, '\mcat\M', 'dog', 'gi');

You can use the replace function

UPDATE your_table SET field = REPLACE(your_field, 'cat','dog')

The function definition is as follows (got from here):

replace(string text, from text, to text)

and returns the modified text. You can also check out this sql fiddle.