- StarRocks
- Introduction to StarRocks
- Quick Start
- Table Design
- Data Loading
- Concepts
- Overview of data loading
- Load data from a local file system or a streaming data source using HTTP PUT
- Load data from HDFS or cloud storage
- Continuously load data from Apache Kafka®
- Bulk load using Apache Spark™
- Load data using INSERT
- Synchronize data from MySQL in real time
- Continuously load data from Apache Flink®
- Change data through loading
- Transform data at loading
- Data Unloading
- Query Data Sources
- Query Acceleration
- Administration
- Deployment
- Management
- Data Recovery
- User Privilege and Authentication
- Performance Tuning
- Reference
- SQL Reference
- User Account Management
- Cluster Management
- ADD SQLBLACKLIST
- ADMIN CANCEL REPAIR TABLE
- ADMIN CHECK TABLET
- ADMIN REPAIR TABLE
- ADMIN SET CONFIG
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- ADMIN SHOW CONFIG
- ADMIN SHOW REPLICA DISTRIBUTION
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- ALTER RESOURCE GROUP
- ALTER SYSTEM
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- CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
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- CREATE RESOURCE
- CREATE TABLE AS SELECT
- CREATE TABLE LIKE
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- CREATE FUNCTION
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- DROP INDEX
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- DROP REPOSITORY
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- DROP TABLE
- DROP VIEW
- DROP FUNCTION
- HLL
- RECOVER
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- SHOW RESOURCES
- SHOW FUNCTION
- TRUNCATE TABLE
- USE
- DML
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- CANCEL EXPORT
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- SHOW PARTITIONS
- SHOW PROPERTY
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- SHOW RESTORE
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- SHOW ROUTINE LOAD TASK
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- SHOW TABLES
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- SHOW TRANSACTION
- SPARK LOAD
- STOP ROUTINE LOAD
- STREAM LOAD
- Auxiliary Commands
- Data Types
- Function Reference
- Java UDFs
- Window functions
- Aggregate Functions
- Array Functions
- Bit Functions
- Bitmap Functions
- base64_to_bitmap
- bitmap_agg
- bitmap_and
- bitmap_andnot
- bitmap_contains
- bitmap_count
- bitmap_from_string
- bitmap_empty
- bitmap_has_any
- bitmap_hash
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- bitmap_max
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- bitmap_or
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- bitmap_to_array
- bitmap_to_string
- bitmap_union
- bitmap_union_count
- bitmap_union_int
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- intersect_count
- to_bitmap
- Conditional Functions
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- Date Functions
- add_months
- adddate
- convert_tz
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- current_time
- current_timestamp
- date
- date_add
- date_format
- date_sub, subdate
- date_trunc
- datediff
- day
- dayname
- dayofmonth
- dayofweek
- dayofyear
- days_add
- days_diff
- days_sub
- from_days
- from_unixtime
- hour
- hours_add
- hours_diff
- hours_sub
- microseconds_add
- microseconds_sub
- minute
- minutes_add
- minutes_diff
- minutes_sub
- month
- monthname
- months_add
- months_diff
- months_sub
- now
- quarter
- second
- seconds_add
- seconds_diff
- seconds_sub
- str_to_date
- str2date
- time_slice
- time_to_sec
- timediff
- timestamp
- timestampadd
- timestampdiff
- to_date
- to_days
- unix_timestamp
- utc_timestamp
- week
- weekofyear
- weeks_add
- weeks_diff
- weeks_sub
- year
- years_add
- years_diff
- years_sub
- Geographic Functions
- JSON Functions
- Overview of JSON functions and operators
- JSON operators
- JSON constructor functions
- JSON query and processing functions
- Math Functions
- String Functions
- Pattern Matching Functions
- Percentile Functions
- Scalar Functions
- Utility Functions
- cast function
- hash function
- System variables
- Error code
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- SQL Reference
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- Code Style Guides
- Use the debuginfo file for debugging
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json_query
Description
Queries the value of an element that can be located by the json_path
expression in a JSON object and returns a JSON value.
Syntax
json_query(json_object_expr, json_path)
Parameters
json_object_expr
: the expression that represents the JSON object. The object can be a JSON column, or a JSON object that is produced by a JSON constructor function such as PARSE_JSON.json_path
: the expression that represents the path to an element in the JSON object. The value of this parameter is a string. For information about the JSON path syntax that is supported by StarRocks, see Overview of JSON functions and operators.
Return value
Returns a JSON value.
If the element does not exist, the json_query function returns an SQL value of
NULL
.
Examples
Example 1: Query the value of an element that can be located by the '$.a.b'
expression in the specified JSON object. In this example, the json_query function returns a JSON value of 1
.
mysql> SELECT json_query(PARSE_JSON('{"a": {"b": 1}}'), '$.a.b') ;
-> 1
Example 2: Query the value of an element that can be located by the '$.a.c'
expression in the specified JSON object. In this example, the element does not exist. Therefore, the json_query function returns an SQL value of NULL
.
mysql> SELECT json_query(PARSE_JSON('{"a": {"b": 1}}'), '$.a.c') ;
-> NULL
Example 3: Query the value of an element that can be located by the '$.a[2]'
expression in the specified JSON object. In this example, the JSON object, which is an array named a, contains an element at index 2, and the value of the element is 3. Therefore, the JSON_QUERY function returns a JSON value of 3
.
mysql> SELECT json_query(PARSE_JSON('{"a": [1,2,3]}'), '$.a[2]') ;
-> 3
Example 4: Query an element that can be located by the '$.a[3]'
expression in the specified JSON object. In this example, the JSON object, which is an array named a, does not contain an element at index 3. Therefore, the json_query function returns an SQL value of NULL
.
mysql> SELECT json_query(PARSE_JSON('{"a": [1,2,3]}'), '$.a[3]') ;
-> NULL