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FossilOrigin-Name: feba24ef774d80ebbaf87a93fc106cb7e482edcc3f237edd4c9d4e918ffb3131
145 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
145 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
# JSON Functions Enhancements (2022)
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This document summaries enhancements to the SQLite JSON support added in
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early 2022.
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## 1.0 Change summary:
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1. New **->** and **->>** operators that work like MySQL and PostgreSQL (PG).
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2. JSON functions are built-in rather than being an extension. They
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are included by default, but can be omitted using the
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-DSQLITE_OMIT_JSON compile-time option.
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## 2.0 New operators **->** and **->>**
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The SQLite language adds two new binary operators **->** and **->>**.
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Both operators are similar to json_extract(). The left operand is
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JSON and the right operand is a JSON path expression (possibly abbreviated
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for compatibility with PG - see below). So they are similar to a
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two-argument call to json_extract().
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The difference between -> and ->> (and json_extract()) is as follows:
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* The -> operator always returns JSON.
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* The ->> operator converts the answer into a primitive SQL datatype
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such as TEXT, INTEGER, REAL, or NULL. If a JSON object or array
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is selected, that object or array is rendered as text. If a JSON
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value is selected, that value is converted into its corresponding
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SQL type
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* The json_extract() interface returns JSON when a JSON object or
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array is selected, or a primitive SQL datatype when a JSON value
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is selected. This is different from MySQL, in which json_extract()
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always returns JSON, but the difference is retained because it has
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worked that way for 6 years and changing it now would likely break
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a lot of legacy code.
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In MySQL and PG, the ->> operator always returns TEXT (or NULL) and never
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INTEGER or REAL. This is due to limitations in the type handling capabilities
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of those systems. In MySQL and PG, the result type a function or operator
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may only depend on the type of its arguments, never the value of its arguments.
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But the underlying JSON type depends on the value of the JSON path
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expression, not the type of the JSON path expression (which is always TEXT).
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Hence, the result type of ->> in MySQL and PG is unable to vary according
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to the type of the JSON value being extracted.
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The type system in SQLite is more general. Functions in SQLite are able
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to return different datatypes depending on the value of their arguments.
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So the ->> operator in SQLite is able to return TEXT, INTEGER, REAL, or NULL
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depending on the JSON type of the value being extracted. This means that
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the behavior of the ->> is slightly different in SQLite versus MySQL and PG
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in that it will sometimes return INTEGER and REAL values, depending on its
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inputs. It is possible to implement the ->> operator in SQLite so that it
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always operates exactly like MySQL and PG and always returns TEXT or NULL,
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but I have been unable to think of any situations where returning the
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actual JSON value this would cause problems, so I'm including the enhanced
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functionality in SQLite.
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The table below attempts to summarize the differences between the
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-> and ->> operators and the json_extract() function, for SQLite, MySQL,
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and PG. JSON values are shown using their SQL text representation but
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in a bold font.
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<table border=1 cellpadding=5 cellspacing=0>
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<tr><th>JSON<th>PATH<th>-> operator<br>(all)<th>->> operator<br>(MySQL/PG)
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<th>->> operator<br>(SQLite)<th>json_extract()<br>(SQLite)
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<tr><td> **'{"a":123}'** <td>'$.a'<td> **'123'** <td> '123' <td> 123 <td> 123
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<tr><td> **'{"a":4.5}'** <td>'$.a'<td> **'4.5'** <td> '4.5' <td> 4.5 <td> 4.5
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<tr><td> **'{"a":"xyz"}'** <td>'$.a'<td> **'"xyz"'** <td> 'xyz' <td> 'xyz' <td> 'xyz'
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<tr><td> **'{"a":null}'** <td>'$.a'<td> **'null'** <td> NULL <td> NULL <td> NULL
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<tr><td> **'{"a":[6,7,8]}'** <td>'$.a'<td> **'[6,7,8]'** <td> '[6,7,8]' <td> '[6,7,8]' <td> **'[6,7,8]'**
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<tr><td> **'{"a":{"x":9}}'** <td>'$.a'<td> **'{"x":9}'** <td> '{"x":9}' <td> '{"x":9}' <td> **'{"x":9}'**
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<tr><td> **'{"b":999}'** <td>'$.a'<td> NULL <td> NULL <td> NULL <td> NULL
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</table>
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Important points about the table above:
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* The -> operator always returns either JSON or NULL.
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* The ->> operator never returns JSON. It always returns TEXT or NULL, or in the
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case of SQLite, INTEGER or REAL.
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* The MySQL json_extract() function works exactly the same
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as the MySQL -> operator.
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* The SQLite json_extract() operator works like -> for JSON objects and
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arrays, and like ->> for JSON values.
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* The -> operator works the same for all systems.
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* The only difference in ->> between SQLite and other systems is that
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when the JSON value is numeric, SQLite returns a numeric SQL value,
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whereas the other systems return a text representation of the numeric
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value.
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### 2.1 Abbreviated JSON path expressions for PG compatibility
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The table above always shows the full JSON path expression: '$.a'. But
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PG does not accept this syntax. PG only allows a single JSON object label
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name or a single integer array index. In order to provide compatibility
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with PG, The -> and ->> operators in SQLite are extended to also support
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a JSON object label or an integer array index for the right-hand side
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operand, in addition to a full JSON path expression.
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Thus, a -> or ->> operator that works on MySQL will work in
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SQLite. And a -> or ->> operator that works in PG will work in SQLite.
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But because SQLite supports the union of the disjoint capabilities of
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MySQL and PG, there will always be -> and ->> operators that work in
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SQLite that do not work in one of MySQL and PG. This is an unavoidable
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consequence of the different syntax for -> and ->> in MySQL and PG.
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In the following table, assume that "value1" is a JSON object and
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"value2" is a JSON array.
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<table border=1 cellpadding=5 cellspacing=0>
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<tr><th>SQL expression <th>Works in MySQL?<th>Works in PG?<th>Works in SQLite
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<tr><td>value1->'$.a' <td> yes <td> no <td> yes
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<tr><td>value1->'a' <td> no <td> yes <td> yes
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<tr><td>value2->'$[2]' <td> yes <td> no <td> yes
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<tr><td>value2->2 <td> no <td> yes <td> yes
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</table>
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The abbreviated JSON path expressions only work for the -> and ->> operators
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in SQLite. The json_extract() function, and all other built-in SQLite
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JSON functions, continue to require complete JSON path expressions for their
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PATH arguments.
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## 3.0 JSON moved into the core
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The JSON interface is now moved into the SQLite core.
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When originally written in 2015, the JSON functions were an extension
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that could be optionally included at compile-time, or loaded at run-time.
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The implementation was in a source file named ext/misc/json1.c in the
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source tree. JSON functions were only compiled in if the
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-DSQLITE_ENABLE_JSON1 compile-time option was used.
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After these enhancements, the JSON functions are now built-ins.
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The source file that implements the JSON functions is moved to src/json.c.
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No special compile-time options are needed to load JSON into the build.
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Instead, there is a new -DSQLITE_OMIT_JSON compile-time option to leave
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them out.
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