Implementation of SQL Server native data from XML to generate JSON data instance code, xmljson
Example code for generating JSON data from XML with SQL Server native data
SQL Server is a relational database, and the query results are usually datasets. However, in some special situations, we need XML data. In the past few years, JSON has been used as a common data interchange format for webapis, how does the database generate JSON data? Today I wrote a DEMO.
1. Create tables and test data
SET NOCOUNT ON IF OBJECT_ID('STATS') IS NOT NULL DROP TABLE STATS IF OBJECT_ID('STATIONS') IS NOT NULL DROP TABLE STATIONS IF OBJECT_ID('OPERATORS') IS NOT NULL DROP TABLE OPERATORS IF OBJECT_ID('REVIEWS') IS NOT NULL DROP TABLE REVIEWS -- Create and populate table with Station CREATE TABLE STATIONS(ID INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, CITY NVARCHAR(20), STATE CHAR(2), LAT_N REAL, LONG_W REAL); INSERT INTO STATIONS VALUES (13, 'Phoenix', 'AZ', 33, 112); INSERT INTO STATIONS VALUES (44, 'Denver', 'CO', 40, 105); INSERT INTO STATIONS VALUES (66, 'Caribou', 'ME', 47, 68); -- Create and populate table with Operators CREATE TABLE OPERATORS(ID INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, NAME NVARCHAR(20), SURNAME NVARCHAR(20)); INSERT INTO OPERATORS VALUES (50, 'John "The Fox"', 'Brown'); INSERT INTO OPERATORS VALUES (51, 'Paul', 'Smith'); INSERT INTO OPERATORS VALUES (52, 'Michael', 'Williams'); -- Create and populate table with normalized temperature and precipitation data CREATE TABLE STATS ( STATION_ID INTEGER REFERENCES STATIONS(ID), MONTH INTEGER CHECK (MONTH BETWEEN 1 AND 12), TEMP_F REAL CHECK (TEMP_F BETWEEN -80 AND 150), RAIN_I REAL CHECK (RAIN_I BETWEEN 0 AND 100), PRIMARY KEY (STATION_ID, MONTH)); INSERT INTO STATS VALUES (13, 1, 57.4, 0.31); INSERT INTO STATS VALUES (13, 7, 91.7, 5.15); INSERT INTO STATS VALUES (44, 1, 27.3, 0.18); INSERT INTO STATS VALUES (44, 7, 74.8, 2.11); INSERT INTO STATS VALUES (66, 1, 6.7, 2.10); INSERT INTO STATS VALUES (66, 7, 65.8, 4.52); -- Create and populate table with Review CREATE TABLE REVIEWS(STATION_ID INTEGER,STAT_MONTH INTEGER,OPERATOR_ID INTEGER) insert into REVIEWS VALUES (13,1,50) insert into REVIEWS VALUES (13,7,50) insert into REVIEWS VALUES (44,7,51) insert into REVIEWS VALUES (44,7,52) insert into REVIEWS VALUES (44,7,50) insert into REVIEWS VALUES (66,1,51) insert into REVIEWS VALUES (66,7,51)
2. query result set
select STATIONS.ID as ID, STATIONS.CITY as City, STATIONS.STATE as State, STATIONS.LAT_N as LatN, STATIONS.LONG_W as LongW, STATS.MONTH as Month, STATS.RAIN_I as Rain, STATS.TEMP_F as Temp, OPERATORS.NAME as Name, OPERATORS.SURNAME as Surname from stations inner join stats on stats.STATION_ID=STATIONS.ID left join reviews on reviews.STATION_ID=stations.id and reviews.STAT_MONTH=STATS.[MONTH] left join OPERATORS on OPERATORS.ID=reviews.OPERATOR_ID
Result:
2. query xml data
select stations.*, (select stats.*, (select OPERATORS.* from OPERATORS inner join reviews on OPERATORS.ID=reviews.OPERATOR_ID where reviews.STATION_ID=STATS.STATION_ID and reviews.STAT_MONTH=STATS.MONTH for xml path('operator'),type ) operators from STATS where STATS.STATION_ID=stations.ID for xml path('stat'),type ) stats from stations for xml path('station'),type
Result:
<station> <ID>13</ID> <CITY>Phoenix</CITY> <STATE>AZ</STATE> <LAT_N>3.3000000e+001</LAT_N> <LONG_W>1.1200000e+002</LONG_W> <stats> <stat> <STATION_ID>13</STATION_ID> <MONTH>1</MONTH> <TEMP_F>5.7400002e+001</TEMP_F> <RAIN_I>3.1000000e-001</RAIN_I> <operators> <operator> <ID>50</ID> <NAME>John "The Fox"</NAME> <SURNAME>Brown</SURNAME> </operator> </operators> </stat> <stat> <STATION_ID>13</STATION_ID> <MONTH>7</MONTH> <TEMP_F>9.1699997e+001</TEMP_F> <RAIN_I>5.1500001e+000</RAIN_I> <operators> <operator> <ID>50</ID> <NAME>John "The Fox"</NAME> <SURNAME>Brown</SURNAME> </operator> </operators> </stat> </stats> </station> <station> <ID>44</ID> <CITY>Denver</CITY> <STATE>CO</STATE> <LAT_N>4.0000000e+001</LAT_N> <LONG_W>1.0500000e+002</LONG_W> <stats> <stat> <STATION_ID>44</STATION_ID> <MONTH>1</MONTH> <TEMP_F>2.7299999e+001</TEMP_F> <RAIN_I>1.8000001e-001</RAIN_I> </stat> <stat> <STATION_ID>44</STATION_ID> <MONTH>7</MONTH> <TEMP_F>7.4800003e+001</TEMP_F> <RAIN_I>2.1099999e+000</RAIN_I> <operators> <operator> <ID>51</ID> <NAME>Paul</NAME> <SURNAME>Smith</SURNAME> </operator> <operator> <ID>52</ID> <NAME>Michael</NAME> <SURNAME>Williams</SURNAME> </operator> <operator> <ID>50</ID> <NAME>John "The Fox"</NAME> <SURNAME>Brown</SURNAME> </operator> </operators> </stat> </stats> </station> <station> <ID>66</ID> <CITY>Caribou</CITY> <STATE>ME</STATE> <LAT_N>4.7000000e+001</LAT_N> <LONG_W>6.8000000e+001</LONG_W> <stats> <stat> <STATION_ID>66</STATION_ID> <MONTH>1</MONTH> <TEMP_F>6.6999998e+000</TEMP_F> <RAIN_I>2.0999999e+000</RAIN_I> <operators> <operator> <ID>51</ID> <NAME>Paul</NAME> <SURNAME>Smith</SURNAME> </operator> </operators> </stat> <stat> <STATION_ID>66</STATION_ID> <MONTH>7</MONTH> <TEMP_F>6.5800003e+001</TEMP_F> <RAIN_I>4.5200000e+000</RAIN_I> <operators> <operator> <ID>51</ID> <NAME>Paul</NAME> <SURNAME>Smith</SURNAME> </operator> </operators> </stat> </stats> </station>
3. How to generate JSON data
1) create auxiliary functions
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[qfn_XmlToJson](@XmlData xml) RETURNS nvarchar(max) AS BEGIN declare @m nvarchar(max) SELECT @m='['+Stuff ( (SELECT theline from (SELECT ','+' {'+Stuff ( (SELECT ',"'+coalesce(b.c.value('local-name(.)', 'NVARCHAR(255)'),'')+'":'+ case when b.c.value('count(*)','int')=0 then dbo.[qfn_JsonEscape](b.c.value('text()[1]','NVARCHAR(MAX)')) else dbo.qfn_XmlToJson(b.c.query('*')) end from x.a.nodes('*') b(c) for xml path(''),TYPE).value('(./text())[1]','NVARCHAR(MAX)') ,1,1,'')+'}' from @XmlData.nodes('/*') x(a) ) JSON(theLine) for xml path(''),TYPE).value('.','NVARCHAR(MAX)') ,1,1,'')+']' return @m END
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[qfn_JsonEscape](@value nvarchar(max) ) returns nvarchar(max) as begin if (@value is null) return 'null' if (TRY_PARSE( @value as float) is not null) return @value set @value=replace(@value,'\','\\') set @value=replace(@value,'"','\"') return '"'+@value+'"' end
3) query SQL
select dbo.qfn_XmlToJson ( ( select stations.ID,stations.CITY,stations.STATE,stations.LAT_N,stations.LONG_W , (select stats.*, (select OPERATORS.* from OPERATORS inner join reviews on OPERATORS.ID=reviews.OPERATOR_ID where reviews.STATION_ID=STATS.STATION_ID and reviews.STAT_MONTH=STATS.MONTH for xml path('operator'),type ) operators from STATS where STATS.STATION_ID=stations.ID for xml path('stat'),type ) stats from stations for xml path('stations'),type ) )
Result:
[ {"ID":13,"CITY":"Phoenix","STATE":"AZ","LAT_N":3.3000000e+001,"LONG_W":1.1200000e+002,"stats":[ {"STATION_ID":13,"MONTH":1,"TEMP_F":5.7400002e+001,"RAIN_I":3.1000000e-001,"operators":[ {"ID":50,"NAME":"John \"The Fox\"","SURNAME":"Brown"}]}, {"STATION_ID":13,"MONTH":7,"TEMP_F":9.1699997e+001,"RAIN_I":5.1500001e+000,"operators":[ {"ID":50,"NAME":"John \"The Fox\"","SURNAME":"Brown"}]}]}, {"ID":44,"CITY":"Denver","STATE":"CO","LAT_N":4.0000000e+001,"LONG_W":1.0500000e+002,"stats":[ {"STATION_ID":44,"MONTH":1,"TEMP_F":2.7299999e+001,"RAIN_I":1.8000001e-001}, {"STATION_ID":44,"MONTH":7,"TEMP_F":7.4800003e+001,"RAIN_I":2.1099999e+000,"operators":[ {"ID":51,"NAME":"Paul","SURNAME":"Smith"}, {"ID":52,"NAME":"Michael","SURNAME":"Williams"}, {"ID":50,"NAME":"John \"The Fox\"","SURNAME":"Brown"}]}]}, {"ID":66,"CITY":"Caribou","STATE":"ME","LAT_N":4.7000000e+001,"LONG_W":6.8000000e+001,"stats":[ {"STATION_ID":66,"MONTH":1,"TEMP_F":6.6999998e+000,"RAIN_I":2.0999999e+000,"operators":[ {"ID":51,"NAME":"Paul","SURNAME":"Smith"}]}, {"STATION_ID":66,"MONTH":7,"TEMP_F":6.5800003e+001,"RAIN_I":4.5200000e+000,"operators":[ {"ID":51,"NAME":"Paul","SURNAME":"Smith"}]}]}]
Summary:
JSON is a flexible Web communication and exchange architecture. If configuration data is stored in the database and JSON is directly obtained, the configuration is very simple and can greatly reduce the pressure on the application server!
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