PostgreSQL provides the standard SQL type boolean. boolean can have one of only two states: "true" or "false". A third state, "unknown", is represented by the SQL null value.
Valid literal values for the "true" state are:
TRUE |
't' |
'true' |
'y' |
'yes' |
'1' |
FALSE |
'f' |
'false' |
'n' |
'no' |
'0' |
Example 8-2. Using the boolean type
CREATE TABLE test1 (a boolean, b text); INSERT INTO test1 VALUES (TRUE, 'sic est'); INSERT INTO test1 VALUES (FALSE, 'non est'); SELECT * FROM test1; a | b ---+--------- t | sic est f | non est SELECT * FROM test1 WHERE a; a | b ---+--------- t | sic est
Example 8-2 shows that boolean values are output using the letters t and f.
boolean uses 1 byte of storage.