> On 26 Oct 2021, at 16:16, Marcos Pegoraro <marcos@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > >> Don’t use this approach with JSON (as opposed to JSONB) type fields though, a single extra space in the JSON structure would already lead to a difference, as would other formatting differences. >> > I don´t think two equal values being converted to json will be different in any way. If row_to_json of both are different, I suppose both record really are different, no ? For row_to_json, as it’s the system that combines the fields in a row into a JSON structure and it probably would do that in the same way each time. The OP however has a field of type JSON in their table, and that can contain the same information between the OLD and NEW fields formatted in a slightly different way. For example: => with x as ( select '{ "x": 1, "y": 2 }'::json union all select '{ "y": 2, "x": 1 }'::json ) select row(x.json)::text, md5(row(x.json)::text) from x; row | md5 ----------------------------+---------------------------------- ("{ ""x"": 1, ""y"": 2 }") | 84df40e8660dcf371d89dbf5d6a61c3d ("{ ""y"": 2, ""x"": 1 }") | abd6db88c2526be6ea97570aeec7e020 (2 rows) Whereas: => with x as ( select '{ "x": 1, "y": 2 }'::jsonb union all select '{ "y": 2, "x": 1 }'::jsonb ) select row(x.jsonb)::text, md5(row(x.jsonb)::text) from x; row | md5 --------------------------+---------------------------------- ("{""x"": 1, ""y"": 2}") | d5a6dbdec7a5bfe0dc99e090db30322e ("{""x"": 1, ""y"": 2}") | d5a6dbdec7a5bfe0dc99e090db30322e (2 rows) Alban Hertroys -- There is always an exception to always.