10.10. JSON Functions
- json_array_contains(json, value) → boolean
Determine if value exists in json (a string containing a JSON array):
SELECT json_array_contains('[1, 2, 3]', 2);
- json_array_length(json) → bigint
Returns the array length of json (a string containing a JSON array):
SELECT json_array_length('[1, 2, 3]');
- json_extract(json, json_path) → json
Evaluates the JSONPath-like expression json_path on json (a string containing JSON) and returns the result as a JSON string:
SELECT json_extract(json, '$.store.book');
- json_extract_scalar(json, json_path) → varchar
Like json_extract(), but returns the result value as a string (as opposed to being encoded as JSON). The value referenced by json_path must be a scalar (boolean, number or string):
SELECT json_extract_scalar('[1, 2, 3]', '$[2]'); SELECT json_extract_scalar(json, '$.store.book[0].author');
- json_array_get(json_array, index) → varchar
Returns the element at the specified index into the json_array. The index is zero-based:
SELECT json_array_get('["a", "b", "c"]', 0); => "a" SELECT json_array_get('["a", "b", "c"]', 1); => "b"
This function also supports negative indexes for fetching element indexed from the end of an array:
SELECT json_array_get('["c", "b", "a"]', -1); => "a" SELECT json_array_get('["c", "b", "a"]', -2); => "b"
If the element at the specified index doesn’t exist, the function returns null:
SELECT json_array_get('[]', 0); => null SELECT json_array_get('["a", "b", "c"]', 10); => null SELECT json_array_get('["c", "b", "a"]', -10); => null
- json_size(json, json_path) → bigint
Like json_extract(), but returns the size of the value. For objects or arrays, the size is the number of members, and the size of a scalar value is zero:
SELECT json_size('{"x": {"a": 1, "b": 2}}', '$.x'); => 2 SELECT json_size('{"x": [1, 2, 3]}', '$.x'); => 3 SELECT json_size('{"x": {"a": 1, "b": 2}}', '$.x.a'); => 0