I have document like below and i want to implement filter based on type in the range of timespan
{ fruit : Mango , timestamp : sometime , ...},
{ fruit : Apple , timestamp : sometime , ...}
{ fruit : Grape , timestamp : sometime ,....}
My View's map function will emit like below .
emit ([doc.fruit,doc.timestamp], callingSomeMethodGetFormattedValuelue());
To query the records in a particular time period by specific fruit type i'm using like
startKey=['Mango',sometime] and endKey=['Mango',sometime]
My requirement is like , i want to filter by two type's of fruits Mango and Apple ,
Can somebody help me to achieve that ? Can i Pass Array of startKey and endKey !!.
The view i'm using also doing some complex logic's to format the data , can i achieve it without using N1QL
Related
Consider the following JSON object,
[
{
"id": 5964460916832,
"name": "Size",
"value": "Small",
"position": 1,
"product_id": 4588516409440
},
{
"id": 5964460916833,
"name": "Size",
"value": "Medium",
"position": 2,
"product_id": 4588516409440
},
{
"id": 5964460916834,
"name": "Size",
"value": "Large",
"position": 3,
"product_id": 4588516409440
}
]
This is a value present in a table field called custom_attrs of JSON data type in a MySQL 8.0 table. I wanted to search the JSON data to match with multiple fields in the same object.
For example,
I wanted to see if there's a match for name "Size" and value "Medium" within the same object. It should not match the name in the first object and the value in the second object.
While we can always use JSON table, I don't prefer that due to the complexities it brings during the JOINs.
JSON_SEARCH supports LIKE operator, but it cannot ensure if it's from the same object
JSON_CONTAINS supports multiple fields but not LIKE as follows,
SET #doc = CAST('[{"id":5964460916832,"name":"Size","value":"Small","position":1,"product_id":4588516409440},{"id":5964460916833,"name":"Size","value":"Medium","position":2,"product_id":4588516409440},{"id":5964460916834,"name":"Size","value":"Large","position":3,"product_id":4588516409440}]' AS JSON);
SELECT JSON_CONTAINS(#doc, '{"name":"Size", "value":"Small"}')
Is there any way to get the same JSON_CONTAINS like functionality with partial search like, {"name":"Size", "value":"%sma%"}
Any help on this would be greatly helpful.
JSON_CONTAINS() only works with equality, not with pattern matching.
The JSON_TABLE() function is the solution intended to address the task you are trying to do. But you said you don't want to use it.
You can simulate JSON_TABLE() using other functions.
select * from (
select
json_unquote(json_extract(col, concat('$[',n.i,'].id'))) as `id`,
json_unquote(json_extract(col, concat('$[',n.i,'].name'))) as `name`,
json_unquote(json_extract(col, concat('$[',n.i,'].value'))) as `value`
from (select #doc as col) j
cross join (select 0 as i union select 1 union select 2 union select 3 union select 4 union select 5 ...) as n
) as t
where t.`id` is not null
order by id, `name`;
Output:
+---------------+------+--------+
| id | name | value |
+---------------+------+--------+
| 5964460916832 | Size | Small |
| 5964460916833 | Size | Medium |
| 5964460916834 | Size | Large |
+---------------+------+--------+
You could then easily add a condition like AND value LIKE '%sma%'.
As you can see, this query is even more complex than if you had used JSON_TABLE().
Really, any solution is going to be complex when you store your data in JSON format, then try to use SQL expressions and relational operations to query them as if they are normalized data. This is because you're practically implementing a mini-database within the functions of a real database. This is sometimes called the Inner-Platform Effect:
The inner-platform effect is the tendency of software architects to create a system so customizable as to become a replica, and often a poor replica, of the software development platform they are using. This is generally inefficient and such systems are often considered to be examples of an anti-pattern.
If you want simple queries, you should store data in normal rows and columns, not in JSON. Then you could get your result using quite ordinary SQL:
SELECT id, name, value FROM MyTable WHERE name = 'Size' AND value LIKE '%sma%';
I am inserting my data in a database with json_encoded. Now I want to search in "feature", but the result is not exactly true.
MySQL query:
select *
from `modul_69`
where `extmod` like '%"68":%'
and `extmod` like '%"4"%'
and `extmod` not like '%"4":%'
Results:
row1 data:
{"68":["1","4","7"],"67":["14"],"75":["28"]} - true
row2 data:
{"68":["59"],"67":["1","11","13"],"75":["3","4","5","27"]} - false
I want select only row1 by key:68 and value:4
Please help
Here is one way to do it using MySQL JSON functions, available since version 5.7:
select *
from t
where json_search(js -> '$."68"', 'one', '4') is not null
What this does is get the array that correspond to outer key '68' (using ->, which is a syntactic sugar for json_extract()), and then search its content with json_search(); if a non-null value is returned, we have a match.
To find if the value '"4"' is contained in the member '"68"', you can first extract the array using JSON_EXTRACT() :
SELECT JSON_EXTRACT(m.extmod, '$."68"')
FROM modul_69 m;
This outputs
["1", "4", "7"]
["59"]
To search in a JSON array if it contains a specific value, you can use JSON_CONTAINS() :
SELECT JSON_CONTAINS('["1", "4", "7"]', '"4"', '$'); -- output is 1
SELECT JSON_CONTAINS('["59"]', '"4"', '$'); -- output is 0
Now you can combine both functions to get the rows that contains the expected value :
Schema (MySQL v5.7)
CREATE TABLE modul_69
(
extmod JSON
);
INSERT INTO modul_69 VALUES ('{"68":["1","4","7"],"67":["14"],"75":["28"]}'), ('{"68":["59"],"67":["1","11","13"],"75":["3","4","5","27"]}');
Query #1
SELECT *
FROM modul_69 m
WHERE JSON_CONTAINS(JSON_EXTRACT(m.extmod, '$."68"'),
'"4"',
'$') = 1;
Output
| extmod |
| --------------------------------------------------- |
| {"67": ["14"], "68": ["1", "4", "7"], "75": ["28"]} |
View on DB Fiddle
I am going to convert my current PostgreSQL database into a MongoDB version. For example, I have a table to record tweets, and another table to record multiple hashtags used by a specific tweet. What I wanna do is to use SQL to get a table like below and then export it as a .csv file so that I could import it to MongoDB.
Example:
2018-04-02 18:12:32 This plane has no outlet for me to charge my p... [{'tag': 'GucciGarden', 'airline': 'American A...
The problem that I met is that I can get a .csv file contains json array like "[{'tag': 'GucciGarden', 'airline': 'American A...", but it is a String type! And when I import it into MongoDB. The quote will be kept, which makes sth wrong.
And here is my SQL code:
SELECT tweets.tweet_id,tweets.text,
(SELECT array_to_json(array_agg(row_to_json(d)))
from (
SELECT tags.tag
FROM
tags
WHERE tags.tweet_id=tweets.tweet_id
) d
) as Tags
from tweets
Here is the result that I import into MongoDB:
{
"_id" : ObjectId("5ac59c272221ade1185ec241"),
"tweet_id" : 9.80869021435351e+17.0,
"created_at" : "2018-04-02 18:06:13",
"text" : "RT #MiraSorvino: Brad Myles shares #Delta that awareness is working- 9,000 #humantrafficking cases identified by #polarisproject National H��",
"screen_name" : "MMexville",
"favorite_count" : 0.0,
"retweet_count" : 40.0,
"source" : "the public",
"tags" : "[{'tag': 'humantrafficking', 'airline': 'Delta Air Lines'}]"}
this is because [{'tag': is not a valid json - you should have used double quotes and cast to json, eg:
let's say smth like your sample:
t=# create table c (i int, t text, j text);
CREATE TABLE
t=# insert into c values(1,'text',$$[{'tag': 'GucciGarden'}]$$);
INSERT 0 1
t=# select * from c;
i | t | j
---+------+--------------------------
1 | text | [{'tag': 'GucciGarden'}]
(1 row)
so then smth like your qry:
t=# select to_json(c) from (select i,t,replace(j,$$'$$,'"')::json j from c) c;
to_json
-------------------------------------------------
{"i":1,"t":"text","j":[{"tag": "GucciGarden"}]}
(1 row)
of course you will have positive false replacements of single quotes, eg 'tag': 'Gucci's Garden' will break the query logic, so you will have to make a more sophisticated replacement. probably with regular expressions to be neater.
I have 2 Tables:
Molecule containing :
-id
-MainName (ex: caffeine)
JsonTextMining containing :
-id
-solrId (ex: PMC54233)
-MoleculeName (ex: caffeine | aspirin | sugar )
They are ManyToMany relation so there is a third table jsonTextMiningMolecule that have:
-json_text_mining_id
-molecule_id
I want to find a postgresql command that can split the moleculeName string and then compare with mainName to attribute id's in jsonTextMiningMolecule
For the moment i got something like this :
edit:
update json_text_mining_molecule SET molecule_id = molecule.id
FROM molecule, json_text_mining
WHERE split_part(json_text_mining.molecule_name, ' | ', 2 ) = molecule.main_name
The result of this command is update 0 (perhap's because i have non null constraint on json_text_mining_id) and split_part don't work as he need to choose one part of the string
Try looking into split_part command.
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/functions-string.html
You can find many other string operations in there!
EDIT:
Try regexp_split_to_array with IN clause
I have scenario where i need to search multiple values in a JSON array. Below is my schema.
ID DATA
1 {"bookIds" : [1,2,3,5], "storeIds": [2,3]}
2 {"bookIds" : [1,2], "storeIds": [1,3]}
3 {"bookIds" : [11,12,10,9], "storeIds": [4,3]}
I want all the rows with value 1,2. Below is query i am using (This is query is written by one of fellow stackoverflow user Mr. klin credit to him).
select t.*
from JSONTest t, json_array_elements(data->'bookIds') books
where books::text::int in (1, 2);
However output I am duplicate rows in output, below is my output.
id data
1 {"bookIds" : [1,2,3,5], "storeIds": [2,3]}
1 {"bookIds" : [1,2,3,5], "storeIds": [2,3]}
2 {"bookIds" : [1,2], "storeIds": [1,3]}
2 {"bookIds" : [1,2], "storeIds": [1,3]}
I want only two rows in output that is id 1,2. How can i do that? I don't want use Distinct due to other constraints,
SQL Fiddle : http://sqlfiddle.com/#!15/6457a/2
Unfortunately there is no direct conversion function from a JSON array to a "real" Postgres array. (data ->'bookIds')::text returns something that is nearly a Postgres array literal: e.g. [1,2,3,5]. If you replace the [] with {} the value can be cast to an integer array. Once we have a proper integer array we can use the #> to test if it contains another array:
select *
from jsontest
where translate((data ->'bookIds')::text, '[]', '{}')::int[] #> array[1,2];
translate((data ->'bookIds')::text, '[]', '{}') will convert [1,2,3,5] to {1,2,3,5} which then is converted to an array using ::int[]
SQLFiddle: http://sqlfiddle.com/#!15/6457a/4