--- title: Indexing Expressions description: Add Postgres expressions to the index canonical: https://docs.paradedb.com/documentation/indexing/indexing-expressions --- In addition to indexing columns, Postgres expressions can also be indexed. For instance, the following statement indexes an expression which concatenates `description` and `category`: ```sql CREATE INDEX search_idx ON mock_items USING bm25 (id, ((description || ' ' || category)::pdb.simple('alias=description_concat'))) WITH (key_field='id'); ``` To index an expression: 1. Add the expression to the column list. In this example, the expression is `description || ' ' || category`. 2. Cast it to a [tokenizer](/documentation/tokenizers), in this example `pdb.simple`. 3. ParadeDB will try and infer a field name based on the field used in the expression. However, if the field name cannot be inferred (e.g. because the expression involves more than one field), you will be required to add an `alias=` to the tokenizer. Querying against the expression is the same as querying a regular field: ```sql SELECT description, rating, category FROM mock_items WHERE (description || ' ' || category) &&& 'running shoes'; ``` The expression on the left-hand side of the operator must exactly match the expression that was indexed. ## Indexing Non-Text Expressions To index a non-text expression, cast the expression to `pdb.alias`. For example, the following statement indexes the expression `rating + 1`, which returns an integer: ```sql CREATE INDEX search_idx ON mock_items USING bm25 (id, description, ((rating + 1)::pdb.alias('rating'))) WITH (key_field='id'); ``` With the expression indexed, queries containing the expression can be pushed down to the ParadeDB index: ```sql SELECT description, rating, category FROM mock_items WHERE description &&& 'running shoes' AND rating + 1 > 3; ```