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PostgreSQL BETWEEN

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL BETWEEN operator to check if a value falls in a particular range of values.

Introduction to the PostgreSQL BETWEEN operator

The BETWEEN operator allows you to check if a value falls within a range of values.

The basic syntax of the BETWEEN operator is as follows:

value BETWEEN low AND high;

If the value is greater than or equal to the low value and less than or equal to the high value, the BETWEEN operator returns true; otherwise, it returns false.

You can rewrite the BETWEEN operator by using the greater than or equal ( >=) and less than or equal to ( <=) operators and the logical AND operator:

value >= low AND value <= high

If you want to check if a value is outside a specific range, you can use the NOT BETWEEN operator as follows:

value NOT BETWEEN low AND high

The following expression is equivalent to the expression that uses the NOT BETWEEN operators:

value < low OR value > high

In practice, you often use the BETWEENoperator in the WHERE clause of the SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statements.

PostgreSQL BETWEEN operator examples

Let’s take a look at the paymenttable in the sample database.

payment table

1) Using the PostgreSQL BETWEEN operator with numbers

The following query uses the BETWEEN operator to retrieve payments with payment_id is between 17503 and 17505:

SELECT
payment_id,
amount
FROM
payment
WHERE
payment_id BETWEEN 17503 AND 17505
ORDER BY
payment_id;

Output:

 payment_id | amount
------------+--------
17503 | 7.99
17504 | 1.99
17505 | 7.99
(3 rows)

2) Using the PostgreSQL NOT BETWEEN example

The following example uses the NOT BETWEEN operator to find payments with the payment_id not between 17503 and 17505:

SELECT
payment_id,
amount
FROM
payment
WHERE
payment_id NOT BETWEEN 17503 AND 17505
ORDER BY
payment_id;

Output:

payment_id | amount
------------+--------
17506 | 2.99
17507 | 7.99
17508 | 5.99
17509 | 5.99
17510 | 5.99
...

3) Using the PostgreSQL BETWEEN with a date range

If you want to check a value against a date range, you use the literal date in ISO 8601 format, which is YYYY-MM-DD.

The following example uses the BETWEEN operator to find payments whose payment dates are between 2007-02-15 and 2007-02-20 and amount more than 10:

SELECT
customer_id,
payment_id,
amount,
payment_date
FROM
payment
WHERE
payment_date BETWEEN '2007-02-15' AND '2007-02-20'
AND amount > 10
ORDER BY
payment_date;

Output:

 customer_id | payment_id | amount |        payment_date
-------------+------------+--------+----------------------------
33 | 18640 | 10.99 | 2007-02-15 08:14:59.996577
544 | 18272 | 10.99 | 2007-02-15 16:59:12.996577
516 | 18175 | 10.99 | 2007-02-16 13:20:28.996577
572 | 18367 | 10.99 | 2007-02-17 02:33:38.996577
260 | 19481 | 10.99 | 2007-02-17 16:37:30.996577
477 | 18035 | 10.99 | 2007-02-18 07:01:49.996577
221 | 19336 | 10.99 | 2007-02-19 09:18:28.996577
(7 rows)

Summary

  • Use the BETWEEN operator to check if a value falls within a particular range.
  • Use the NOT BETWEEN operator to negate the BETWEEN operator.