mirror of https://github.com/apache/druid.git
73 lines
4.4 KiB
Markdown
73 lines
4.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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id: sql-json-functions
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title: "SQL JSON functions"
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sidebar_label: "JSON functions"
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---
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<!--
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~ Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
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~ regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
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~ to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
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~ "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
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~ with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
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~ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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~ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
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~ "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
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~ specific language governing permissions and limitations
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~ under the License.
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<!--
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The format of the tables that describe the functions and operators
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should not be changed without updating the script create-sql-docs
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in web-console/script/create-sql-docs, because the script detects
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patterns in this markdown file and parse it to TypeScript file for web console
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-->
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Druid supports nested columns, which provide optimized storage and indexes for nested data structures. See [Nested columns](./nested-columns.md) for more information.
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You can use the following JSON functions to extract, transform, and create `COMPLEX<json>` values.
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| Function | Notes |
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| --- | --- |
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|`JSON_KEYS(expr, path)`| Returns an array of field names from `expr` at the specified `path`.|
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|`JSON_OBJECT(KEY expr1 VALUE expr2[, KEY expr3 VALUE expr4, ...])` | Constructs a new `COMPLEX<json>` object. The `KEY` expressions must evaluate to string types. The `VALUE` expressions can be composed of any input type, including other `COMPLEX<json>` values. `JSON_OBJECT` can accept colon-separated key-value pairs. The following syntax is equivalent: `JSON_OBJECT(expr1:expr2[, expr3:expr4, ...])`.|
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|`JSON_PATHS(expr)`| Returns an array of all paths which refer to literal values in `expr` in JSONPath format. |
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|`JSON_QUERY(expr, path)`| Extracts a `COMPLEX<json>` value from `expr`, at the specified `path`. |
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|`JSON_QUERY_ARRAY(expr, path)`| Extracts an `ARRAY<COMPLEX<json>>` value from `expr` at the specified `path`. If value is not an `ARRAY`, it gets translated into a single element `ARRAY` containing the value at `path`. The primary use of this function is to extract arrays of objects to use as inputs to other [array functions](./sql-array-functions.md).|
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|`JSON_VALUE(expr, path [RETURNING sqlType])`| Extracts a literal value from `expr` at the specified `path`. If you specify `RETURNING` and an SQL type name (such as `VARCHAR`, `BIGINT`, `DOUBLE`, etc) the function plans the query using the suggested type. Otherwise, it attempts to infer the type based on the context. If it can't infer the type, it defaults to `VARCHAR`.|
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|`PARSE_JSON(expr)`|Parses `expr` into a `COMPLEX<json>` object. This operator deserializes JSON values when processing them, translating stringified JSON into a nested structure. If the input is not a `VARCHAR` or it is invalid JSON, this function will result in an error.|
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|`TRY_PARSE_JSON(expr)`|Parses `expr` into a `COMPLEX<json>` object. This operator deserializes JSON values when processing them, translating stringified JSON into a nested structure. If the input is not a `VARCHAR` or it is invalid JSON, this function will result in a `NULL` value.|
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|`TO_JSON_STRING(expr)`|Serializes `expr` into a JSON string.|
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### JSONPath syntax
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Druid supports a subset of the [JSONPath syntax](https://github.com/json-path/JsonPath/blob/master/README.md) operators, primarily limited to extracting individual values from nested data structures.
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|Operator|Description|
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| --- | --- |
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|`$`| Root element. All JSONPath expressions start with this operator. |
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|`.<name>`| Child element in dot notation. |
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|`['<name>']`| Child element in bracket notation. |
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|`[<number>]`| Array index. |
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Consider the following example input JSON:
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```json
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{"x":1, "y":[1, 2, 3]}
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```
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- To return the entire JSON object:<br />
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`$` -> `{"x":1, "y":[1, 2, 3]}`
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- To return the value of the key "x":<br />
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`$.x` -> `1`
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- For a key that contains an array, to return the entire array:<br />
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`$['y']` -> `[1, 2, 3]`
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- For a key that contains an array, to return an item in the array:<br />
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`$.y[1]` -> `2` |