@@ -11457,14 +11457,28 @@ table2-mapping
1145711457
1145811458 <note>
1145911459 <para>
11460- In <function>json_populate_record</>, <function>json_populate_recordset</>,
11461- <function>json_to_record</> and <function>json_to_recordset</>,
11462- type coercion from the JSON is <quote>best effort</> and may not result
11463- in desired values for some types. JSON keys are matched to
11464- identical column names in the target row type. JSON fields that do not
11465- appear in the target row type will be omitted from the output, and
11466- target columns that do not match any JSON field will simply be NULL.
11460+ While the examples for the functions
11461+ <function>json_populate_record</function>,
11462+ <function>json_populate_recordset</function>,
11463+ <function>json_to_record</function> and
11464+ <function>json_to_recordset</function> use constants, the typical use
11465+ would be to reference a table in the <literal>FROM</literal> clause
11466+ and use one of its <type>json</type> or <type>jsonb</type> columns
11467+ as an argument to the function. Extracted key values can then be
11468+ referenced in other parts of the query, like <literal>WHERE</literal>
11469+ clauses and target lists. Extracting multiple values in this
11470+ way can improve performance over extracting them separately with
11471+ per-key operators.
1146711472 </para>
11473+
11474+ <para>
11475+ JSON keys are matched to identical column names in the target
11476+ row type. JSON type coercion for these functions is <quote>best
11477+ effort</quote> and may not result in desired values for some types.
11478+ JSON fields that do not appear in the target row type will be
11479+ omitted from the output, and target columns that do not match any
11480+ JSON field will simply be NULL.
11481+ </para>
1146811482 </note>
1146911483
1147011484 <note>