What is json-query?
The json-query npm package allows you to query and manipulate JSON data using a simple and intuitive syntax. It is particularly useful for extracting specific data from complex JSON structures.
What are json-query's main functionalities?
Basic Querying
This feature allows you to perform basic queries on JSON data. In this example, it filters the 'people' array to find entries where the 'country' is 'NZ'.
const jsonQuery = require('json-query');
const data = { people: [{ name: 'Matt', country: 'NZ' }, { name: 'Pete', country: 'AU' }] };
const result = jsonQuery('people[country=NZ]', { data: data }).value;
console.log(result); // Output: [{ name: 'Matt', country: 'NZ' }]
Nested Queries
This feature allows you to perform queries on nested JSON structures. In this example, it filters the 'people' array to find entries where the 'address.city' is 'Auckland'.
const jsonQuery = require('json-query');
const data = { people: [{ name: 'Matt', address: { city: 'Auckland' } }, { name: 'Pete', address: { city: 'Sydney' } }] };
const result = jsonQuery('people[address.city=Auckland]', { data: data }).value;
console.log(result); // Output: [{ name: 'Matt', address: { city: 'Auckland' } }]
Aggregation
This feature allows you to aggregate data from JSON structures. In this example, it extracts the 'age' values from the 'people' array.
const jsonQuery = require('json-query');
const data = { people: [{ name: 'Matt', age: 30 }, { name: 'Pete', age: 40 }] };
const result = jsonQuery('people.age', { data: data }).value;
console.log(result); // Output: [30, 40]
Complex Conditions
This feature allows you to use complex conditions in your queries. In this example, it filters the 'people' array to find entries where the 'age' is greater than 30.
const jsonQuery = require('json-query');
const data = { people: [{ name: 'Matt', age: 30 }, { name: 'Pete', age: 40 }] };
const result = jsonQuery('people[age>30]', { data: data }).value;
console.log(result); // Output: [{ name: 'Pete', age: 40 }]
Other packages similar to json-query
lodash
Lodash is a modern JavaScript utility library delivering modularity, performance, and extras. It provides a wide range of utility functions for common programming tasks, including querying and manipulating JSON data. Compared to json-query, Lodash offers a broader set of functionalities but may require more verbose code for complex queries.
jmespath
JMESPath is a query language for JSON. It allows you to declaratively specify how to extract elements from a JSON document. JMESPath is more specialized for querying JSON data compared to json-query and offers a more expressive query language.
jsonpath
JSONPath is a query language for JSON, similar to XPath for XML. It allows you to navigate and query JSON data structures. JSONPath is similar to json-query in its purpose but uses a different syntax and may offer different features.
json-query
Retrieves values from JSON objects for data binding. Offers params, nested queries, deep queries, custom reduce/filter functions and simple boolean logic.
Install via npm
$ npm install json-query
API
var jsonQuery = require('json-query')
jsonQuery(query, options)
Specify a query and what to query. Returns an object that describes the result of the query.
var data = {
people: [
{name: 'Matt', country: 'NZ'},
{name: 'Pete', country: 'AU'},
{name: 'Mikey', country: 'NZ'}
]
}
jsonQuery('people[country=NZ].name', {
data: data
})
Options:
data
or rootContext
: The main object to query.source
or context
(optional): The current object we're interested in. Accessed in query with .
.parent
(optional): An additional context for looking further up the tree. Accessed by ..
.locals
: Specify an object containing helper functions. Accessed by ':filterName'
. Expects function(input, args...)
with this
set to original passed in options.globals
: Falls back to globals when no local function found.force
(optional): Specify an object to be returned from the query if the query fails. It will be saved into the place the query expected the object to be.allowRegexp
(optional): Enable the ~
operator. Before enabling regexp match to anyone, consider the user defined regular expression security concerns.
Queries
Queries are strings that describe an object or value to pluck out, or manipulate from the context object. The syntax is a little bit CSS, a little bit JS, but pretty powerful.
Accessing properties (dot notation)
person.name
Array accessors
people[0]
Array pluck
people.name
=> return all the names of people
Get all values of a lookup
lookup[*]
Array filter
By default only the first matching item will be returned:
people[name=Matt]
But if you add an asterisk (*
), all matching items will be returned:
people[*country=NZ]
You can use comparative operators:
people[*rating>=3]
Or use boolean logic:
people[* rating >= 3 & starred = true]
If options.enableRegexp
is enabled, you can use the ~
operator to match RegExp
:
people[*name~/^R/i]
You can also negate any of the above examples by adding a !
before the =
or ~
:
people[*country!=NZ]
Or syntax
person.greetingName|person.name
Deep queries
Search through multiple levels of Objects/Arrays using [**]
:
var data = {
grouped_people: {
'friends': [
{name: 'Steve', country: 'NZ'},
{name: 'Jane', country: 'US'},
{name: 'Mike', country: 'AU'},
{name: 'Mary', country: 'NZ'},
],
'enemies': [
{name: 'Evil Steve', country: 'AU'}
{name: 'Betty', country: 'NZ'},
]
}
}
var result = jsonQuery('grouped_people[**][*country=NZ]', {data: data}).value
The result
will be:
[
{name: 'Steve', country: 'NZ'},
{name: 'Mary', country: 'NZ'},
{name: 'Betty', country: 'NZ'}
]
Inner queries
var data = {
page: {
id: 'page_1',
title: 'Test'
},
comments_lookup: {
'page_1': [
{id: 'comment_1', parent_id: 'page_1', content: "I am a comment"}
]
}
}
jsonQuery('comments_lookup[{page.id}]', {data: data})
Local functions (helpers)
Allows you to hack the query system to do just about anything.
Some nicely contrived examples:
var helpers = {
greetingName: function(input){
if (input.known_as){
return input.known_as
} else {
return input.name
}
},
and: function(inputA, inputB){
return inputA && inputB
},
text: function(input, text){
return text
},
then: function(input, thenValue, elseValue){
if (input){
return thenValue
} else {
return elseValue
}
}
}
var data = {
is_fullscreen: true,
is_playing: false,
user: {
name: "Matthew McKegg",
known_as: "Matt"
}
}
jsonQuery('user:greetingName', {
data: data, locals: helpers
}).value
jsonQuery(['is_fullscreen:and({is_playing}):then(?, ?)', "Playing big!", "Not so much"], {
data: data, locals: helpers
}).value
jsonQuery(':text(This displays text cos we made it so)', {
locals: helpers
}).value
Or you could add a select
helper:
jsonQuery('people:select(name, country)', {
data: data,
locals: {
select: function (input) {
if (Array.isArray(input)) {
var keys = [].slice.call(arguments, 1)
return input.map(function (item) {
return Object.keys(item).reduce(function (result, key) {
if (~keys.indexOf(key)) {
result[key] = item[key]
}
return result
}, {})
})
}
}
}
})
You can also use helper functions inside array filtering:
jsonQuery('people[*:recentlyUpdated]', {
data: data,
locals: {
recentlyUpdated: function (item) {
return item.updatedAt < Date.now() - (30 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000)
}
}
})
Context
Specifying context (data
, source
, and parent
options) is good for databinding and working on a specific object and still keeping the big picture available.
var data = {
styles: {
bold: 'font-weight:strong',
red: 'color: red'
},
paragraphs: [
{content: "I am a red paragraph", style: 'red'},
{content: "I am a bold paragraph", style: 'bold'},
],
}
var pageHtml = ''
data.paragraphs.forEach(function(paragraph){
var style = jsonQuery('styles[{.style}]', {data: data, source: paragraph}).value
var content = jsonQuery('.content', data: data, source: paragraph)
pageHtml += "<p style='" + style "'>" + content + "</p>"
})
Query Params
Params can be specified by passing in an array with the first param the query (with ?
params) and subsequent params.
jsonQuery(['people[country=?]', 'NZ'])
License
MIT