I think you are just trying to get the number of columns in the underlying table, no real cost to read the metadata
select count(id), (select count(attrelid) from pg_attribute where attrelid= 't1'::regclass and attnum>0) , json_agg(t) from t1 t; select count(id), (select count(attrelid) from pg_attribute where attrelid= 't2'::regclass and attnum>0) , json_agg(t) from t2 t; Regards Hector Vass 07773 352559 On Tue, Nov 28, 2023 at 12:12 PM Dominique Devienne <ddevie...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi. I've got a nice little POC using PostgreSQL to implement a REST API > server. > This uses json_agg(t) to generate the JSON of tables (or subqueries in > general), > which means I always get back a single row (and column, before I added the > count(t.*)). > > But I'd like to get statistics on the number of rows aggregated (easy, > count(*)), > but also the number of columns of those rows! And I'm stuck for the > latter... > > Is there a (hopefully efficient) way to get back the cardinality of a > select-clause basically? > Obviously programmatically I can get the row and column count from the > result-set, > but I see the result of json_agg() myself, while I want the value prior to > json_agg(). > > Is there a way to achieve this? > > Thanks, --DD > > PS: In the example below, would return 1 for the 1st query, and 2 for the > 2nd. > > ``` > migrated=> create table t1 (id integer); > CREATE TABLE > migrated=> insert into t1 values (1), (2); > INSERT 0 2 > migrated=> create table t2 (id integer, name text); > CREATE TABLE > migrated=> insert into t2 values (1, 'one'), (2, 'two'); > INSERT 0 2 > migrated=> select count(t.*), json_agg(t) from t1 t; > count | json_agg > -------+------------- > 2 | [{"id":1}, + > | {"id":2}] > (1 row) > > > migrated=> select count(t.*), json_agg(t) from t2 t; > count | json_agg > -------+-------------------------- > 2 | [{"id":1,"name":"one"}, + > | {"id":2,"name":"two"}] > (1 row) > ``` >