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OPENJSON (Transact-SQL)

  • 2024-11-22
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Applies to: SQL Server 2016 (13.x) and later versionsAzure SQL DatabaseAzure SQL Managed InstanceAzure Synapse AnalyticsSQL analytics endpoint in Microsoft FabricWarehouse in Microsoft FabricSQL database in Microsoft Fabric

OPENJSON is a table-valued function that parses JSON text and returns objects and properties from the JSON input as rows and columns. In other words,OPENJSON provides a rowset view over a JSON document. You can explicitly specify the columns in the rowset and the JSON property paths used to populate the columns. SinceOPENJSON returns a set of rows, you can useOPENJSON in theFROM clause of a Transact-SQL statement just as you can use any other table, view, or table-valued function.

UseOPENJSON to import JSON data into SQL Server, or to convert JSON data to relational format for an app or service that can't consume JSON directly.

Note

TheOPENJSON function is available only under compatibility level 130 or higher. If your database compatibility level is lower than 130, SQL Server can't find and run theOPENJSON function. Other JSON functions are available at all compatibility levels.

You can check compatibility level in thesys.databases view or in database properties. You can change the compatibility level of a database with the following command:

ALTER DATABASE DatabaseName SET COMPATIBILITY_LEVEL = 130

Transact-SQL syntax conventions

Syntax

OPENJSON( jsonExpression [ , path ] )  [ <with_clause> ]<with_clause> ::= WITH ( { colName type [ column_path ] [ AS JSON ] } [ ,...n ] )

TheOPENJSON table-valued function parses thejsonExpression provided as the first argument and returns one or more rows containing data from the JSON objects in the expression.jsonExpression can contain nested sub-objects. If you want to parse a sub-object from withinjsonExpression, you can specify apath parameter for the JSON sub-object.

openjson

Syntax for OPENJSON TVF

By default, theOPENJSON table-valued function returns three columns, which contain the key name, the value, and the type of each {key:value} pair found injsonExpression. As an alternative, you can explicitly specify the schema of the result set thatOPENJSON returns by providingwith_clause.

with_clause

Syntax for WITH clause in OPENJSON TVF

with_clause contains a list of columns with their types forOPENJSON to return. By default,OPENJSON matches keys injsonExpression with the column names inwith_clause (in this case, matches keys implies that it is case sensitive). If a column name does not match a key name, you can provide an optionalcolumn_path, which is aJSON Path Expression that references a key within thejsonExpression.

Arguments

jsonExpression

Is a Unicode character expression containing JSON text.

OPENJSON iterates over the elements of the array or the properties of the object in the JSON expression and returns one row for each element or property. The following example returns each property of the object provided asjsonExpression:

DECLARE @json NVARCHAR(2048) = N'{   "String_value": "John",   "DoublePrecisionFloatingPoint_value": 45,   "DoublePrecisionFloatingPoint_value": 2.3456,   "BooleanTrue_value": true,   "BooleanFalse_value": false,   "Null_value": null,   "Array_value": ["a","r","r","a","y"],   "Object_value": {"obj":"ect"}}';SELECT * FROM OpenJson(@json);

Results:

keyvaluetype
String_valueJohn1
DoublePrecisionFloatingPoint_value452
DoublePrecisionFloatingPoint_value2.34562
BooleanTrue_valuetrue3
BooleanFalse_valuefalse3
Null_valueNULL0
Array_value["a","r","r","a","y"]4
Object_value{"obj":"ect"}5
  • The DoublePrecisionFloatingPoint_value conforms to IEEE-754.

path

Is an optional JSON path expression that references an object or an array withinjsonExpression.OPENJSON seeks into the JSON text at the specified position and parses only the referenced fragment. For more info, seeJSON Path Expressions (SQL Server).

In SQL Server 2017 (14.x) and in Azure SQL Database, you can provide a variable as the value ofpath.

The following example returns a nested object by specifying thepath:

DECLARE @json NVARCHAR(4000) = N'{        "path": {              "to":{                   "sub-object":["en-GB", "en-UK","de-AT","es-AR","sr-Cyrl"]                   }                }   }';SELECT [key], valueFROM OPENJSON(@json,'$.path.to."sub-object"')

Results

KeyValue
0en-GB
1en-UK
2de-AT
3es-AR
4sr-Cyrl

WhenOPENJSON parses a JSON array, the function returns the indexes of the elements in the JSON text as keys.

The comparison used to match path steps with the properties of the JSON expression is case-sensitive and collation-unaware (that is, a BIN2 comparison).

Array element identity

theOPENJSON function in the serverless SQL pool in Azure Synapse Analytics can automatically generate the identity of each row that is returned as a result. The identity column is specified using the expression$.sql:identity() in the JSON path after the column definition. The column with this value in the JSON path expression will generate a unique 0-based number for each element in the JSON array that the function parses. The identity value represents the position/index of the array element.

DECLARE @array VARCHAR(MAX);SET @array = '[{"month":"Jan", "temp":10},{"month":"Feb", "temp":12},{"month":"Mar", "temp":15},               {"month":"Apr", "temp":17},{"month":"May", "temp":23},{"month":"Jun", "temp":27}              ]';SELECT * FROM OPENJSON(@array)        WITH (  month VARCHAR(3),                temp int,                month_id tinyint '$.sql:identity()') as months

Results

monthtempmonth_id
Jan100
Feb121
Mar152
Apr173
May234
Jun275

The identity is available only in the serverless SQL pool in Synapse Analytics.

with_clause

Explicitly defines the output schema for theOPENJSON function to return. The optionalwith_clause can contain the following elements:

colNameIs the name for the output column.

By default,OPENJSON uses the name of the column to match a property in the JSON text. For example, if you specify the columnname in the schema, OPENJSON tries to populate this column with the property "name" in the JSON text. You can override this default mapping by using thecolumn_path argument.

type
Is the data type for the output column.

Note

If you also use theAS JSON option, the columntype must beNVARCHAR(MAX).

column_path
Is the JSON path that specifies the property to return in the specified column. For more info, see the description of thepath parameter previously in this topic.

Usecolumn_path to override default mapping rules when the name of an output column doesn't match the name of the property.

The comparison used to match path steps with the properties of the JSON expression is case-sensitive and collation-unaware (that is, a BIN2 comparison).

For more info about paths, seeJSON Path Expressions (SQL Server).

AS JSON
Use theAS JSON option in a column definition to specify that the referenced property contains an inner JSON object or array. If you specify theAS JSON option, the type of the column must be NVARCHAR(MAX).

  • If you don't specifyAS JSON for a column, the function returns a scalar value (for example, int, string, true, false) from the specified JSON property on the specified path. If the path represents an object or an array, and the property can't be found at the specified path, the function returns null in lax mode or returns an error in strict mode. This behavior is similar to the behavior of theJSON_VALUE function.

  • If you specifyAS JSON for a column, the function returns a JSON fragment from the specified JSON property on the specified path. If the path represents a scalar value, and the property can't be found at the specified path, the function returns null in lax mode or returns an error in strict mode. This behavior is similar to the behavior of theJSON_QUERY function.

Note

If you want to return a nested JSON fragment from a JSON property, you have to provide theAS JSON flag. Without this option, if the property can't be found, OPENJSON returns a NULL value instead of the referenced JSON object or array, or it returns a run-time error in strict mode.

For example, the following query returns and formats the elements of an array:

DECLARE @json NVARCHAR(MAX) = N'[    {      "Order": {        "Number":"SO43659",        "Date":"2011-05-31T00:00:00"      },      "AccountNumber":"AW29825",      "Item": {        "Price":2024.9940,        "Quantity":1      }    },    {      "Order": {        "Number":"SO43661",        "Date":"2011-06-01T00:00:00"      },      "AccountNumber":"AW73565",      "Item": {        "Price":2024.9940,        "Quantity":3      }    }]'     SELECT *FROM OPENJSON ( @json )  WITH (                 Number   VARCHAR(200)   '$.Order.Number',                Date     DATETIME       '$.Order.Date',                Customer VARCHAR(200)   '$.AccountNumber',                Quantity INT            '$.Item.Quantity',                [Order]  NVARCHAR(MAX)  AS JSON   )

Results

NumberDateCustomerQuantityOrder
SO436592011-05-31T00:00:00AW298251{"Number":"SO43659","Date":"2011-05-31T00:00:00"}
SO436612011-06-01T00:00:00AW735653{"Number":"SO43661","Date":"2011-06-01T00:00:00"}

Return value

The columns that the OPENJSON function returns depend on the WITH option.

  1. When you call OPENJSON with the default schema - that is, when you don't specify an explicit schema in the WITH clause - the function returns a table with the following columns:

    1. Key. An nvarchar(4000) value that contains the name of the specified property or the index of the element in the specified array. The key column has a BIN2 collation.

    2. Value. An nvarchar(max) value that contains the value of the property. The value column inherits its collation fromjsonExpression.

    3. Type. An int value that contains the type of the value. TheType column is returned only when you use OPENJSON with the default schema. The type column has one of the following values:

      Value of the Type columnJSON data type
      0null
      1string
      2number
      3true/false
      4array
      5object

    Only first-level properties are returned. The statement fails if the JSON text is not properly formatted.

  2. When you call OPENJSON and you specify an explicit schema in the WITH clause, the function returns a table with the schema that you defined in the WITH clause.

Note

TheKey,Value, andType columns are returned only when you use OPENJSON with the default schema and are not available with an explicit schema.

Remarks

json_path used in the second argument ofOPENJSON or inwith_clause can start with thelax orstrict keyword.

  • Inlax mode,OPENJSON doesn't raise an error if the object or value on the specified path can't be found. If the path can't be found,OPENJSON returns either an empty result set or a NULL value.
  • Instrict, modeOPENJSON returns an error if the path can't be found.

Some of the examples on this page explicitly specify the path mode, lax or strict. The path mode is optional. If you don't explicitly specify a path mode, lax mode is the default. For more info about path mode and path expressions, seeJSON Path Expressions (SQL Server).

Column names inwith_clause are matched with keys in the JSON text. If you specify the column name[Address.Country], it's matched with the keyAddress.Country. If you want to reference a nested keyCountry within the objectAddress, you have to specify the path$.Address.Country in column path.

json_path may contain keys with alphanumeric characters. Escape the key name injson_path with double quotes if you have special characters in the keys. For example,$."my key $1".regularKey."key with . dot" matches value 1 in the following JSON text:

{  "my key $1": {    "regularKey":{      "key with . dot": 1    }  }}

Examples

Example 1 - Convert a JSON array to a temporary table

The following example provides a list of identifiers as a JSON array of numbers. The query converts the JSON array to a table of identifiers and filters all products with the specified IDs.

DECLARE @pSearchOptions NVARCHAR(4000) = N'[1,2,3,4]'SELECT *FROM productsINNER JOIN OPENJSON(@pSearchOptions) AS productTypes ON product.productTypeID = productTypes.value

This query is equivalent to the following example. However, in the example below, you have to embed numbers in the query instead of passing them as parameters.

SELECT *FROM productsWHERE product.productTypeID IN (1,2,3,4)

Example 2 - Merge properties from two JSON objects

The following example selects a union of all the properties of two JSON objects. The two objects have a duplicatename property. The example uses the key value to exclude the duplicate row from the results.

DECLARE @json1 NVARCHAR(MAX),@json2 NVARCHAR(MAX)SET @json1=N'{"name": "John", "surname":"Doe"}'SET @json2=N'{"name": "John", "age":45}'SELECT *FROM OPENJSON(@json1)UNION ALLSELECT *FROM OPENJSON(@json2)WHERE [key] NOT IN (SELECT [key] FROM OPENJSON(@json1))

Example 3 - Join rows with JSON data stored in table cells using CROSS APPLY

In the following example, theSalesOrderHeader table has aSalesReason text column that contains an array ofSalesOrderReasons in JSON format. TheSalesOrderReasons objects contain properties likeQuality andManufacturer. The example creates a report that joins every sales order row to the related sales reasons. The OPENJSON operator expands the JSON array of sales reasons as if the reasons were stored in a separate child table. Then the CROSS APPLY operator joins each sales order row to the rows returned by the OPENJSON table-valued function.

SELECT SalesOrderID,OrderDate,value AS ReasonFROM Sales.SalesOrderHeaderCROSS APPLY OPENJSON(SalesReasons)

Tip

When you have to expand JSON arrays stored in individual fields and join them with their parent rows, you typically use the Transact-SQL CROSS APPLY operator. For more info about CROSS APPLY, seeFROM (Transact-SQL).

The same query can be rewritten by usingOPENJSON with an explicitly defined schema of rows to return:

SELECT SalesOrderID, OrderDate, value AS Reason  FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader       CROSS APPLY OPENJSON (SalesReasons) WITH (value NVARCHAR(100) '$')

In this example, the$ path references each element in the array. If you want to explicitly cast the returned value, you can use this type of query.

Example 4 - Combine relational rows and JSON elements with CROSS APPLY

The following query combines relational rows and JSON elements into the results shown in the following table.

SELECT store.title, location.street, location.lat, location.long  FROM store  CROSS APPLY OPENJSON(store.jsonCol, 'lax $.location')        WITH (street VARCHAR(500) ,  postcode VARCHAR(500) '$.postcode' ,       lon int '$.geo.longitude', lat int '$.geo.latitude')       AS location

Results

titlestreetpostcodelonlat
Whole Food Markets17991 Redmond WayWA 9805247.666124-122.10155
Sears148th Ave NEWA 9805247.63024-122.141246,17

Example 5 - Import JSON data into SQL Server

The following example loads an entire JSON object into a SQL Server table.

DECLARE @json NVARCHAR(max)  = N'{    "id" : 2,    "firstName": "John",    "lastName": "Smith",    "isAlive": true,    "age": 25,    "dateOfBirth": "2015-03-25T12:00:00",    "spouse": null    }';       INSERT INTO Person    SELECT *     FROM OPENJSON(@json)    WITH (id INT,          firstName NVARCHAR(50), lastName NVARCHAR(50),           isAlive BIT, age INT,          dateOfBirth DATETIME, spouse NVARCHAR(50))

Example 6 - Simple example with JSON content

--simple cross apply exampleDECLARE @JSON NVARCHAR(MAX) = N'[{"OrderNumber":"SO43659","OrderDate":"2011-05-31T00:00:00","AccountNumber":"AW29825","ItemPrice":2024.9940,"ItemQuantity":1},{"OrderNumber":"SO43661","OrderDate":"2011-06-01T00:00:00","AccountNumber":"AW73565","ItemPrice":2024.9940,"ItemQuantity":3}]'SELECT root.[key] AS [Order],TheValues.[key], TheValues.[value]FROM OPENJSON ( @JSON ) AS rootCROSS APPLY OPENJSON ( root.value) AS TheValues

See also


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