- StarRocks
- Quick Start
- Table Design
- Data Loading
- Data Export
- Using StarRocks
- Reference
- SQL Reference
- User Account Management
- Cluster Management
- ADMIN CANCEL REPAIR
- ADMIN CHECK TABLET
- ADMIN REPAIR
- ADMIN SET CONFIG
- ADMIN SET REPLICA STATUS
- ADMIN SHOW CONFIG
- ADMIN SHOW REPLICA DISTRIBUTION
- ADMIN SHOW REPLICA STATUS
- ALTER SYSTEM
- CANCEL DECOMMISSION
- CREATE FILE
- DROP FILE
- INSTALL PLUGIN
- SHOW BACKENDS
- SHOW BROKER
- SHOW FRONTENDS
- SHOW FULL COLUMNS
- SHOW INDEX
- SHOW PLUGINS
- SHOW TABLE STATUS
- SHOW FILE
- UNINSTALL PLUGIN
- DDL
- ALTER DATABASE
- ALTER TABLE
- ALTER VIEW
- ALTER RESOURCE
- BACKUP
- CANCEL BACKUP
- CANCEL RESTORE
- CREATE DATABASE
- CREATE INDEX
- CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
- CREATE REPOSITORY
- CREATE RESOURCE
- CREATE TABLE AS SELECT
- CREATE TABLE LIKE
- CREATE TABLE
- CREATE VIEW
- CREATE FUNCTION
- DROP DATABASE
- DROP INDEX
- DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW
- DROP REPOSITORY
- DROP RESOURCE
- DROP TABLE
- DROP VIEW
- DROP FUNCTION
- HLL
- RECOVER
- RESTORE
- SHOW RESOURCES
- SHOW FUNCTION
- TRUNCATE TABLE
- DML
- ALTER ROUTINE LOAD
- BROKER LOAD
- CANCEL LOAD
- DELETE
- EXPORT
- GROUP BY
- INSERT
- PAUSE ROUTINE LOAD
- RESUME ROUTINE LOAD
- ROUTINE LOAD
- SELECT
- SHOW ALTER
- SHOW BACKUP
- SHOW DATA
- SHOW DATABASES
- SHOW DELETE
- SHOW DYNAMIC PARTITION TABLES
- SHOW EXPORT
- SHOW LOAD
- SHOW PARTITIONS
- SHOW PROPERTY
- SHOW REPOSITORIES
- SHOW RESTORE
- SHOW ROUTINE LOAD
- SHOW ROUTINE LOAD TASK
- SHOW SNAPSHOT
- SHOW TABLES
- SHOW TABLET
- SHOW TRANSACTION
- SPARK LOAD
- STOP ROUTINE LOAD
- STREAM LOAD
- Data Types
- Auxiliary Commands
- Function Reference
- Date Functions
- Geographic Functions
- String Functions
- JSON Functions
- Overview of JSON functions and operators
- JSON constructor functions
- JSON query and processing functions
- JSON operators
- Aggregate Functions
- Bitmap Functions
- Array Functions
- cast function
- hash function
- Cryptographic Functions
- Math Functions
- Utility Functions
- System variables
- Error code
- System limits
- SQL Reference
- Administration
- FAQ
- Deploy
- Data Migration
- SQL
- Other FAQs
- Benchmark
- Release Notes
json_each
Description
Expands the outermost elements of a JSON object into a set of key-value pairs held in two columns and returns a table that consists of one row for each element.
Syntax
json_each(json_object_expr)
Parameters
json_object_expr
: the expression that represents the JSON object. The object can be a JSON column, or a JSON object that is produced by a JSON constructor function such as PARSE_JSON.
Return value
Returns two columns: one named key and one named value. The key column stores VARCHAR values, and the value column stores JSON values.
Usage notes
The json_each function is a table function that returns a table. The returned table is a result set that consists of multiple rows. Therefore, a lateral join must be used in the FROM clause to join the returned table to the original table. The lateral join is mandatory, but the LATERAL keyword is optional. The json_each function cannot be used in the SELECT clause.
Examples
-- A table named tj is used as an example. In the tj table, the j column is a JSON object.
mysql> SELECT * FROM tj;
+------+------------------+
| id | j |
+------+------------------+
| 1 | {"a": 1, "b": 2} |
| 3 | {"a": 3} |
+------+------------------+
-- Expand the j column of the tj table into two columns by key and value to obtain a result set that consists of multiple rows. In this example, the LATERAL keyword is used to join the result set to the tj table.
mysql> SELECT * FROM tj, LATERAL json_each(j);
+------+------------------+------+-------+
| id | j | key | value |
+------+------------------+------+-------+
| 1 | {"a": 1, "b": 2} | a | 1 |
| 1 | {"a": 1, "b": 2} | b | 2 |
| 3 | {"a": 3} | a | 3 |
+------+------------------+------+-------+