TABLE Customer (
CustomerId integer PRIMARY KEY,
CustomerName varchar(25),
ContactName varchar(25)
Address varchar(50),
City varchar(25),
PostalCode varchar(25),
Country varchar(25),
);
JSON Functions
JSON functions provide functionality for working with JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) data.
Sample Data For Examples
Examples provided with XML functions use the following table structure
with Data
| CustomerID | CustomerName | ContactName | Address | City | PostalCode | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
87 |
Wartian Herkku |
Pirkko Koskitalo |
Torikatu 38 |
Oulu |
90110 |
Finland |
88 |
Wellington Importadora |
Paula Parente |
Rua do Mercado, 12 |
Resende |
08737-363 |
Brazil |
89 |
White Clover Markets |
Karl Jablonski |
305 - 14th Ave. S. Suite 3B |
Seattle |
98128 |
USA |
JSONTOXML
Returns an xml document from JSON.
JSONTOXML(rootElementName, json)
rootElementName is a string, json is in {clob, blob}. Return value is xml.
The appropriate UTF encoding (8, 16LE. 16BE, 32LE, 32BE) will be detected for JSON blobs. If another encoding is used, see the to_chars function.
The result is always a well-formed XML document.
The mapping to XML uses the following rules:
-
The current element name is initially the rootElementName, and becomes the object value name as the JSON structure is traversed.
-
All element names must be valid xml 1.1 names. Invalid names are fully escaped according to the SQLXML specification.
-
Each object or primitive value will be enclosed in an element with the current name.
-
Unless an array value is the root, it will not be enclosed in an additional element.
-
Null values will be represented by an empty element with the attribute xsi:nil="true"
-
Boolean and numerical value elements will have the attribute xsi:type set to boolean and decimal respectively.
JSON:
Sample JSON to XML for jsonToXml(’person’, x)
{"firstName" : "John" , "children" : [ "Randy", "Judy" ]}
XML:
Sample JSON to XML for jsonToXml(’person’, x)
<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<person>
<firstName>John</firstName>
<children>Randy</children>
<children>Judy<children>
</person>
JSON:
[{"firstName" : "George" }, { "firstName" : "Jerry" }]
XML (Notice there is an extra "person" wrapping element to keep the XML well-formed):
<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<person>
<person>
<firstName>George</firstName>
</person>
<person>
<firstName>Jerry</firstName>
</person>
</person>
JSON:
{"/invalid" : "abc" }
XML:
<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<root>
<_x002F_invalid>abc</_x002F_invalid>
</root>
|
Note
|
prior releases defaulted incorrectly to using uXXXX escaping rather than xXXXX. If you need to rely on that behavior see the org.teiid.useXMLxEscape system property. |
JSONARRAY
Returns a JSON array.
JSONARRAY(value...)
value is any object convertable to a JSON value. Return value is a clob marked as being valid JSON.
Null values will be included in the result as null literals.
mixed value example
jsonArray('a"b', 1, null, false, {d'2010-11-21'})
Would return
["a\"b",1,null,false,"2010-11-21"]
Using JSONARRAY on a Table
SELECT JSONARRAY(CustomerId, CustomerName)
FROM Customer c
WHERE c.CustomerID >= 88;
==========================================================
[88,"Wellington Importadora"]
[89,"White Clover Markets"]
JSONOBJECT
Returns a JSON object.
JSONARRAY(value [as name] ...)
value is any object convertable to a JSON value. Return value is a clob marked as being valid JSON.
Null values will be included in the result as null literals.
If a name is not supplied and the expression is a column reference, the column name will be used otherwise exprN will be used where N is the 1-based index of the value in the JSONARRAY expression.
mixed value example
jsonObject('a"b' as val, 1, null as "null")
Would return
{"val":"a\"b","expr2":1,"null":null}
Using JSONOBJECT on a Table
SELECT JSONOBJECT(CustomerId, CustomerName)
FROM Customer c
WHERE c.CustomerID >= 88;
==========================================================
{"CustomerId":88, "CustomerName":"Wellington Importadora"}
{"CustomerId":89, "CustomerName":"White Clover Markets"}
Another example
SELECT JSONOBJECT(JSONOBJECT(CustomerId, CustomerName) as Customer)
FROM Customer c
WHERE c.CustomerID >= 88;
==========================================================
{"Customer":{"CustomerId":88, "CustomerName":"Wellington Importadora"}}
{"Customer":{"CustomerId":89, "CustomerName":"White Clover Markets"}}
Another example
SELECT JSONOBJECT(JSONARRAY(CustomerId, CustomerName) as Customer)
FROM Customer c
WHERE c.CustomerID >= 88;
==========================================================
{"Customer":[88, "Wellington Importadora"]}
{"Customer":[89, "White Clover Markets"]}
JSONPARSE
Validates and returns a JSON result.
JSONPARSE(value, wellformed)
value is blob with an appropriate JSON binary encoding (UTF-8, UTF-16, or UTF-32) or a clob. wellformed is a boolean indicating that validation should be skipped. Return value is a clob marked as being valid JSON.
A null for either input will return null.
json parse of a simple literal value
jsonParse('{"Customer":{"CustomerId":88, "CustomerName":"Wellington Importadora"}}', true)
JSONARRAY_AGG
creates a JSON array result as a Clob including null value. This is similar to JSONARRAY but aggregates its contents into single object
SELECT JSONARRAY_AGG(JSONOBJECT(CustomerId, CustomerName))
FROM Customer c
WHERE c.CustomerID >= 88;
==========================================================
[{"CustomerId":88, "CustomerName":"Wellington Importadora"}, {"CustomerId":89, "CustomerName":"White Clover Markets"}]
You can also wrap array as
SELECT JSONOBJECT(JSONARRAY_AGG(JSONOBJECT(CustomerId as id, CustomerName as name)) as Customer)
FROM Customer c
WHERE c.CustomerID >= 88;
==========================================================
{"Customer":[{"id":89,"name":"Wellington Importadora"},{"id":100,"name":"White Clover Markets"}]}
Conversion to JSON
A straight-forward specification compliant conversion is used for converting values into their appropriate JSON document form.
-
null values are included as the null literal.
-
values parsed as JSON or returned from a JSON construction function (JSONPARSE, JSONARRAY, JSONARRAY_AGG) will be directly appended into a JSON result.
-
boolean values are included as true/false literals
-
numeric values are included as their default string conversion - in some circumstances if not a number or +-infinity results are allowed, invalid json may be obtained.
-
string values are included in their escaped/quoted form.
-
binary values are not implicitly convertable to JSON values and require a specific prior to inclusion in JSON.
-
all other values will be included as their string conversion in the appropriate escaped/quoted form.