Filters allow you to only return rows that match certain conditions.
Filters can be used on select()
, update()
, upsert()
, and delete()
queries.
If a Postgres function returns a table response, you can also apply filters.
Implement URLQueryRepresentable
protocol in your own types to be able to use them as filter value.
Supported filtes are: eq
, neq
, gt
, gte
, lt
, lte
, like
, ilike
, is
, in
, cs
, cd
, sl
, sr
, nxl
, nxr
, adj
, ov
, fts
, plfts
, phfts
, wfts
. Check available operators in PostgREST.
try await supabase
.from("cities")
.select("name, country_id")
.eq("name", value: "The Shire") // Correct
try await supabase
.from("citites")
.eq("name", value: "The Shire") // Incorrect
.select("name, country_id")
try await supabase
.from("cities")
.select("name, country_id")
.gte("population", value: 1000)
.lt("population", value: 10000)
let filterByName: String? = nil
let filterPopLow: Int? = 1000
let filterPopHigh: Int? = 10000
var query = await supabase
.from("cities")
.select("name, country_id")
if let filterByName \{
query = query.eq("name", value: filterByName)
\}
if let filterPopLow \{
query = query.gte("population", value: filterPopLow)
\}
if let filterPopHigh \{
query = query.lt("population", value: filterPopHigh)
\}
struct Response: Decodable \{
// expected fields
\}
let result: Response = try await query.execute().value
try await supabase
.from("users")
.select()
.eq("address->postcode", value: 90210)
try await supabase
.from("countries")
.select(
"""
name,
cities!inner (
name
)
"""
)
.eq("cities.name", value: "Bali")