stddev_pop() — PostgreSQL aggregate aggregate function

stddev_pop(): population standard deviation of bigint input values. PostgreSQL aggregate functions — signature, volatility, version applicability and an illustrative example.

Summary

stddev_pop is a PostgreSQL built-in aggregate function in the Aggregate Functions group. PostgreSQL’s system catalog (pg_proc) describes it as: “population standard deviation of bigint input values”.

Signature

stddev_pop has 6 documented overloaded forms:

stddev_pop(bigint) → numeric
stddev_pop(integer) → numeric
stddev_pop(smallint) → numeric
stddev_pop(real) → double precision
stddev_pop(double precision) → double precision
stddev_pop(numeric) → numeric

Argument and return types are taken from the pg_proc catalog; internal type names are shown using their readable SQL spellings (for example int4 is shown as integer). (Derived from the catalog — see the linked reference for the canonical documentation.)

Classification

  • Category: Aggregate Functions
  • Kind: Aggregate function
  • Volatility: IMMUTABLE — Marked IMMUTABLE — it always returns the same result for the same arguments and can be used in indexes and other contexts that require immutability.
  • Returns: double precision, numeric

Example

Illustrative form (replace placeholder values with your own data):

SELECT stddev_pop(col) FROM your_table;

The example above is illustrative and is meant to show calling syntax only; consult the linked PostgreSQL documentation for exact semantics, edge cases and accepted argument combinations.

Version applicability

stddev_pop is present across the surveyed releases (PostgreSQL 15, 16, 17, 18, 19). On older major versions, behaviour may differ in detail — always check the documentation for the version you run.

Related & references

Reference: PostgreSQL documentation — Aggregate Functions.