8.6. Boolean Type
Postgres Pro provides the standard SQL type boolean; see Table 8.19. The boolean type can have several states: “true”, “false”, and a third state, “unknown”, which is represented by the SQL null value. 
Table 8.19. Boolean Data Type
| Name | Storage Size | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| boolean | 1 byte | state of true or false | 
Valid literal values for the “true” state are:
| TRUE | 
| 't' | 
| 'true' | 
| 'y' | 
| 'yes' | 
| 'on' | 
| '1' | 
For the “false” state, the following values can be used:
| FALSE | 
| 'f' | 
| 'false' | 
| 'n' | 
| 'no' | 
| 'off' | 
| '0' | 
 Leading or trailing whitespace is ignored, and case does not matter. The key words TRUE and FALSE are the preferred (SQL-compliant) usage. 
Example 8.2 shows that boolean values are output using the letters t and f. 
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

