MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
The functions in this section return attributes of JSON values.
Returns the maximum depth of a JSON document. Returns
NULL
if the argument is
NULL
. An error occurs if the argument is
not a valid JSON document.
An empty array, empty object, or scalar value has depth 1. A nonempty array containing only elements of depth 1 or nonempty object containing only member values of depth 1 has depth 2. Otherwise, a JSON document has depth greater than 2.
mysql>SELECT JSON_DEPTH('{}'), JSON_DEPTH('[]'), JSON_DEPTH('true');
+------------------+------------------+--------------------+ | JSON_DEPTH('{}') | JSON_DEPTH('[]') | JSON_DEPTH('true') | +------------------+------------------+--------------------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | +------------------+------------------+--------------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_DEPTH('[10, 20]'), JSON_DEPTH('[[], {}]');
+------------------------+------------------------+ | JSON_DEPTH('[10, 20]') | JSON_DEPTH('[[], {}]') | +------------------------+------------------------+ | 2 | 2 | +------------------------+------------------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_DEPTH('[10, {"a": 20}]');
+-------------------------------+ | JSON_DEPTH('[10, {"a": 20}]') | +-------------------------------+ | 3 | +-------------------------------+
Returns the length of a JSON document, or, if a
path
argument is given, the length
of the value within the document identified by the path.
Returns NULL
if any argument is
NULL
or the path
argument does not identify a value in the document. An error
occurs if the json_doc
argument is
not a valid JSON document or the
path
argument is not a valid path
expression.
The length of a document is determined as follows:
The length of a scalar is 1.
The length of an array is the number of array elements.
The length of an object is the number of object members.
The length does not count the length of nested arrays or objects.
mysql>SELECT JSON_LENGTH('[1, 2, {"a": 3}]');
+---------------------------------+ | JSON_LENGTH('[1, 2, {"a": 3}]') | +---------------------------------+ | 3 | +---------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_LENGTH('{"a": 1, "b": {"c": 30}}');
+-----------------------------------------+ | JSON_LENGTH('{"a": 1, "b": {"c": 30}}') | +-----------------------------------------+ | 2 | +-----------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_LENGTH('{"a": 1, "b": {"c": 30}}', '$.b');
+------------------------------------------------+ | JSON_LENGTH('{"a": 1, "b": {"c": 30}}', '$.b') | +------------------------------------------------+ | 1 | +------------------------------------------------+
Returns a utf8mb4
string indicating the
type of a JSON value. This can be an object, an array, or a
scalar type, as shown here:
mysql>SET @j = '{"a": [10, true]}';
mysql>SELECT JSON_TYPE(@j);
+---------------+ | JSON_TYPE(@j) | +---------------+ | OBJECT | +---------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_TYPE(JSON_EXTRACT(@j, '$.a'));
+------------------------------------+ | JSON_TYPE(JSON_EXTRACT(@j, '$.a')) | +------------------------------------+ | ARRAY | +------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_TYPE(JSON_EXTRACT(@j, '$.a[0]'));
+---------------------------------------+ | JSON_TYPE(JSON_EXTRACT(@j, '$.a[0]')) | +---------------------------------------+ | INTEGER | +---------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_TYPE(JSON_EXTRACT(@j, '$.a[1]'));
+---------------------------------------+ | JSON_TYPE(JSON_EXTRACT(@j, '$.a[1]')) | +---------------------------------------+ | BOOLEAN | +---------------------------------------+
JSON_TYPE()
returns
NULL
if the argument is
NULL
:
mysql> SELECT JSON_TYPE(NULL);
+-----------------+
| JSON_TYPE(NULL) |
+-----------------+
| NULL |
+-----------------+
An error occurs if the argument is not a valid JSON value:
mysql> SELECT JSON_TYPE(1);
ERROR 3146 (22032): Invalid data type for JSON data in argument 1
to function json_type; a JSON string or JSON type is required.
For a non-NULL
, non-error result, the
following list describes the possible
JSON_TYPE()
return values:
Purely JSON types:
OBJECT
: JSON objects
ARRAY
: JSON arrays
BOOLEAN
: The JSON true and false
literals
NULL
: The JSON null literal
Numeric types:
Temporal types:
String types:
Binary types:
All other types:
OPAQUE
(raw bits)
Returns 0 or 1 to indicate whether a value is valid JSON.
Returns NULL
if the argument is
NULL
.
mysql>SELECT JSON_VALID('{"a": 1}');
+------------------------+ | JSON_VALID('{"a": 1}') | +------------------------+ | 1 | +------------------------+ mysql>SELECT JSON_VALID('hello'), JSON_VALID('"hello"');
+---------------------+-----------------------+ | JSON_VALID('hello') | JSON_VALID('"hello"') | +---------------------+-----------------------+ | 0 | 1 | +---------------------+-----------------------+