/jspath

DSL that enables you to navigate and find data within your JSON documents

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

JSPath NPM Version Build Status

JSPath is a domain-specific language (DSL) that enables you to navigate and find data within your JSON documents. Using JSPath, you can select items of JSON in order to retrieve the data they contain.

JSPath for JSON is like XPath for XML.

It's heavily optimized both for Node.js and modern browsers.

Table of Contents

Getting Started

In the Node.js

You can install using Node Package Manager (npm):

npm install jspath

In the Browsers

<script type="text/javascript" src="jspath.min.js"></script>

It also supports RequireJS module format and YM module format.

JSPath has been tested in IE6+, Mozilla Firefox 3+, Chrome 5+, Safari 5+, Opera 10+.

Usage

JSPath.apply(path, json[, substs]);

where:

parameter data type description
path string path expression
json any valid JSON input JSON document
substs object substitutions (optional)

Quick example

JSPath.apply(
    '.automobiles{.maker === "Honda" && .year > 2009}.model',
    {
        "automobiles" : [
            { "maker" : "Nissan", "model" : "Teana", "year" : 2011 },
            { "maker" : "Honda", "model" : "Jazz", "year" : 2010 },
            { "maker" : "Honda", "model" : "Civic", "year" : 2007 },
            { "maker" : "Toyota", "model" : "Yaris", "year" : 2008 },
            { "maker" : "Honda", "model" : "Accord", "year" : 2011 }
        ],
        "motorcycles" : [{ "maker" : "Honda", "model" : "ST1300", "year" : 2012 }]
    });

Result will be:

['Jazz', 'Accord']

Documentation

A JSPath path expression consists of two types of top-level expressions:

  1. the required location path and
  2. one or more optional predicates

This means, a path expression like

.automobiles{.maker === "Honda" && .year > 2009}.model

can be split into

the location path one predicate and the continued location path
.automobiles {.maker === "Honda" && .year > 2009} .model

Location path

To select items in JSPath, you use a location path which consists of one or more location steps.

Every location step starts with one period (.) or two periods (..), depending on the item you're trying to select:

location step description
.property locates property immediately descended from context items
..property locates property deeply descended from context items
. locates context items itself

You can use the wildcard symbol (*) instead of exact name of property:

location step description
.* locates all properties immediately descended from the context items
..* locates all properties deeply descended from the context items

Property must be a sequence of alphanumerical characters including _, $ and @ symbols, that cannot start with a number. If you need to locate properties containing any other characters, you have to quote them:

location step description
."property with non-alphanumerical characters" locates a property containing non-alphanumerical characters

Also JSPath allows to join several properties:

location step description
`(.property1 .property2
`(.property1 .property2.property2_1.property2_1_1)`

Location paths can be absolute or relative. If location path starts with the caret (^) you are using an absolute location path. This syntax is used to locate a property when another context is already used in the location path and/or the object predicates.

Consider the following JSON:

var doc = {
    "books" : [
        {
            "id"     : 1,
            "title"  : "Clean Code",
            "author" : { "name" : "Robert C. Martin" },
            "price"  : 17.96
        },
        {
            "id"     : 2,
            "title"  : "Maintainable JavaScript",
            "author" : { "name" : "Nicholas C. Zakas" },
            "price"  : 10
        },
        {
            "id"     : 3,
            "title"  : "Agile Software Development",
            "author" : { "name" : "Robert C. Martin" },
            "price"  : 20
        },
        {
            "id"     : 4,
            "title"  : "JavaScript: The Good Parts",
            "author" : { "name" : "Douglas Crockford" },
            "price"  : 15.67
        }
    ]
};

Examples

// find all books authors
JSPath.apply('.books.author', doc);
/* [{ name : 'Robert C. Martin' }, { name : 'Nicholas C. Zakas' }, { name : 'Robert C. Martin' }, { name : 'Douglas Crockford' }] */

// find all books author names
JSPath.apply('.books.author.name', doc);
/* ['Robert C. Martin', 'Nicholas C. Zakas', 'Robert C. Martin', 'Douglas Crockford' ] */

// find all names in books
JSPath.apply('.books..name', doc);
/* ['Robert C. Martin', 'Nicholas C. Zakas', 'Robert C. Martin', 'Douglas Crockford' ] */

Predicates

JSPath predicates allow you to write very specific rules about items you'd like to select when constructing your path expression. Predicates are filters that restrict the items selected by the location path. There are two possible types of predicates: object and positional predicates.

Object predicates

Object predicates can be used in a path expression to filter a subset of items according to boolean expressions working on the properties of each item. All object predicates are parenthesized by curly brackets ({ and }).

In JSPath these basic expressions can be used inside an object predicate:

  • numeric literals (e.g. 1.23)
  • string literals (e.g. "John Gold")
  • boolean literals (true and false)
  • null literal (null)
  • subpaths (e.g. .nestedProp.deeplyNestedProp)
  • nested predicates (e.g. .prop{.nestedProp{.deeplyNestedProp{.stillMore || .yetAnother} || .otherDeeplyNested}}

Furthermore, the following types of operators are valid inside an object predicate:

Comparison operators

operator description example
== returns true if both operands are equal .books{.id == "1"}
=== returns true if both operands are strictly equal with no type conversion .books{.id === 1}
!= returns true if the operands are not equal .books{.id != "1"}
!== returns true if the operands are not equal and_or not of the same data type .books{.id !== 1}
> returns true if the left operand is greater than the right operand .books{.id > 1}
>= returns true if the left operand is greater than or equal to the right operand .books{.id >= 1}
< returns true if the left operand is smaller than the right operand .books{.id < 1}
<= returns true if the left operand is smaller than or equal to the right operand .books{.id <= 1}

JSPath uses the following rules to compare arrays and objects of different types:

  • if both operands to be compared are arrays, then the comparison will be true if there is an element in the first array and an element in the second array such that the result of performing the comparison of two elements is true
  • if one operand is array and another is not, then the comparison will be true if there is element in array such that the result of performing the comparison of element and another operand is true
  • primitives to be compared as usual javascript primitives

String comparison operators

If both operands are strings, there're also available additional comparison operators:

operator description example
== returns true if both strings are equal .books{.title == "clean code"}
^== case sensitive; returns true if the left operand starts with the right operand .books{.title ^== "Javascript"}
^= case insensitive; returns true if the left operand starts with the right operand .books{.title ^= "javascript"}
==^ case sensitive; returns true if the right operand starts with the left operand .books{.title ==^ "Javascript"}
=^ case insensitive; returns true if the right operand starts with the left operand .books{.title =^ "javascript"}
$== case sensitive; returns true if the left operand ends with the right operand .books{.title $== "Javascript"}
$= case insensitive; returns true if the left operand ends with the right operand .books{.title $= "javascript"}
==$ case sensitive; returns true if the right operand ends with the left operand .books{.title ==$ "Javascript"}
=$ case insensitive; returns true if the right operand ends with the left operand .books{.title =$ "javascript"}
*== case sensitive; returns true if the left operand contains right operand .books{.title *== "Javascript"}
*= case insensitive; returns true if the left operand contains right operand .books{.title *= "javascript"}
==* case sensitive; returns true if the right operand contains left operand .books{.title ==* "Javascript"}
=* case insensitive; returns true if the right operand contains left operand .books{.title =* "javascript"}

Logical operators

operator description example
&& returns true if both operands are true .books{.price > 19 && .author.name === "Robert C. Martin"}
|| returns true if either or both operands are true .books{.title === "Maintainable JavaScript" || .title === "Clean Code"}
! returns true if operand is false .books{!.title}

In JSPath logical operators convert their operands to boolean values using following rules:

  • if an operand is an array with a length greater than 0 the result will be true else false
  • a casting with double NOT javascript operator (!!) is used in any other cases

Arithmetic operators

operator description
+ addition
- subtraction
* multiplication
/ division
% modulus

Operator precedence

precedence operator
1 (highest) !, unary -
2 *, /, %
3 +, binary -
4 <, <=, >, >=
5 ==, ===, !=, !==, ^=, ^==, $==, $=, *=, *==, =^, ==^, =$, ==$, =*, ==*
6 &&
7 (lowest) ||

Parentheses (( and )) are used to explicitly denote precedence by grouping parts of an expression that should be evaluated first.

Examples

// find all book titles whose author is Robert C. Martin
JSPath.apply('.books{.author.name === "Robert C. Martin"}.title', doc);
/* ['Clean Code', 'Agile Software Development'] */

// find all book titles with price less than 17
JSPath.apply('.books{.price < 17}.title', doc);
/* ['Maintainable JavaScript', 'JavaScript: The Good Parts'] */

Positional predicates

Positional predicates allow you to filter items by their context position. All positional predicates are parenthesized by square brackets ([ and ]).

JSPath supports four types of positional predicates – also known as slicing methods:

operator description example
[index] returns item in context at index index – the first item has index 0, positional predicates are zero-based [3] returns fourth item in context
[start:] returns range of items whose index in context is greater or equal to start [2:] returns items whose index is greater or equal to 2
[:end] returns range of items whose index in context is smaller than end [:5] returns first five items in context
[start:end] returns range of items whose index in context is greater or equal to start and smaller than end [2:5] returns three items on the indices 2, 3 and 4

index, start or end may be a negative number, which means JSPath counts from the end instead of the beginning:

example description
[-1] returns last item in context
[-3:] returns last three items in context

Examples

// find first book title
JSPath.apply('.books[0].title', doc);
/* ['Clean Code'] */

// find first title of books
JSPath.apply('.books.title[0]', doc);
/* 'Clean Code' */

// find last book title
JSPath.apply('.books[-1].title', doc);
/* ['JavaScript: The Good Parts'] */

// find two first book titles
JSPath.apply('.books[:2].title', doc);
/* ['Clean Code', 'Maintainable JavaScript'] */

// find two last book titles
JSPath.apply('.books[-2:].title', doc);
/* ['Agile Software Development', 'JavaScript: The Good Parts'] */

// find two book titles from second position
JSPath.apply('.books[1:3].title', doc);
/* ['Maintainable JavaScript', 'Agile Software Development'] */

Multiple predicates

You can use more than one predicate – any combination of object and positional predicates. The result will contain only items that match all predicates.

Examples

// find first book name whose price less than 15 and greater than 5
JSPath.apply('.books{.price < 15}{.price > 5}[0].title', doc);
/* ['Maintainable JavaScript'] */

Nested predicates

You can nest predicates as deeply as you like — saves having to repeat deep subpaths each time, shortening query length. Similar to JavaScript's "with" operator, all properties of the object become first-level properties inside the nested predicate.

Examples

// long subpaths: find books by various authors, for under $20
JSPath.apply('.books{.price < 20 && (.author.name *== "Zakas" || .author.name *== "Martin")}.title', doc);
/* ['Clean Code', 'Maintainable JavaScript'] */

// nested predicates: same query, however ".author.name" isn't repeated. For JSON with many levels, enables much more compact queries.
JSPath.apply('.books{.price < 20 && .author{.name *== "Zakas" || .name *== "Martin"}}.title', doc);
/* ['Clean Code', 'Maintainable JavaScript'] */

Substitutions

Substitutions allow you to use runtime-evaluated values in predicates and pathes (as a path root).

Examples

var path = '.books{.author.name === $author}.title';

// find book name whose author Nicholas C. Zakas
JSPath.apply(path, doc, { author : 'Nicholas C. Zakas' });
/* ['Maintainable JavaScript'] */

// find books name whose authors Robert C. Martin or Douglas Crockford
JSPath.apply(path, doc, { author : ['Robert C. Martin', 'Douglas Crockford'] });
/* ['Clean Code', 'Agile Software Development', 'JavaScript: The Good Parts'] */

Result

If the last predicate in an expression is a positional predicate using an index (e.g. [0], [5], [-1]), the result is the item at the specified index or undefined if the index is out of range. In any other cases the result of applying JSPath.apply() is always an array – empty ([]), if found nothing.