This discussion reminds me of 6-8 years back when XML was introduced in MySQL ("LOAD DATA XML, "mysqldump --xml", XML functions (ExtractValue etc.). It was a *big hype* at the time it was introduced. Now it seems to be an almost forgotten feature used by close_to_nobody.
What should a JSON option be used for? Passing data series to javascript/HTML5 would be relevant (?). But there are probably many more use cases - including sharing data with NoSQL systems (MongoDB etc.). And each use case may have its own requirements. I think the first thing to define is the*audience* and *target*/*purpose* for such feature and discuss external interfaces rather than internals at this point. -- Peter On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 4:47 PM, Roberto Spadim <robe...@spadim.com.br> wrote: > i will give some ideas , some could be stupid but that's just ideas... > > 1)could be nice a json language as data results, for example > SELECT {'some array':'some value',column1:column2} AS column1 > FROM some_table > > the result of {} is a string utf8, but well know as json format, the sql > server just interpret it and return to client as string, at client side we > can include a json feature to auto translate or not, internally we could > use MDC format, for example... > > 2)SELECT dynamic_column AS column1 <- that's the main problem > FROM some_table > > it could return the json format of dynamic column > how? i don't know..., maybe include a flag at column (CREATE TABLE) to > check if the column value is dynamic column or not? > or at client side, a funtion to translate it, check that in this example > MDC format to client side isn't a "good" idea (since JSON is human > readable), client side know better how to use json, but maybe at storage > level MDC is smaller than json, must think about it... > > 3) INSERT INTO table (string_column) VALUES ({'some_array':'some value'}); > > in this example {} is auto translated to MDC > > others problems.... > > WHERE column = {'a':'b','c':'d'} <- auto translate to MDC string, check > that we will have problems since: {'c':'d','a':'b'}!=={'a':'b','c':'d'}, > maybe we should include a new operator? === <- identical, ==/= <- equal ? > the diference is object keys order > > 4)WHERE column LIKE {'some_array':'abc'} <- what should be done? jpath > search?! maybe we should include a new function "SEARCH" WHERE column > SEARCH {'some_array':'abc'}? > > > > > 2015-01-28 13:16 GMT-02:00 Sergei Golubchik <s...@mariadb.org>: > >> Hi, Tom! >> >> On Jan 27, Tom Worster wrote: >> > 2. In at least two places (one was here >> > < >> https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb/indexoptimizations-in-dynamic-columns/ >> >) >> > I've read text with the implied meaning, "we may improve such-and-such >> > about MDC if and when people start actually using it." >> >> While I know that there are users of dynamic columns, I don't remember >> seeing any feature requests for them. >> >> Okay, there was one, for JSON-like arrays, but it depends on having >> array as a data type, like in regular columns. Not a standalone feature >> for dynamic columns that we can just go no and implement. >> >> > 3. The MDC syntax is so clunky I worry that people who might find it >> > useful are turned away. >> >> That could as well be. And it's bad. What is worse - they're turned away >> without complaining so we don't know what to do to fix dynamic columns. >> >> Any suggestions how we can make the syntax less clunky? >> >> > 4. Did the 5.3 version with numbers for column names turn people off >> > MDC for good? >> >> As far as I have heard, those people who wanted dynamic columns in the >> firts place found the implementation with numbers quite sufficient for >> their needs. But new users probably didn't, I know :) >> >> > 5. The requirement to specify datatype when querying a dynamic column >> is >> > agonizing. The manual says it is a limitation of SQL itself (presumably >> > immutable) but PostgreSQL manages to avoid it when querying jsonb doc >> > properties. >> >> We could workaround this requirement by assuming everything is a string, >> for example. This can be implemented, if that's what users want. >> >> > 6. The lack of indexing of dynamic columns is a severe limitation but >> > PostgreSQL manages to index jsonb document properties. >> >> Right, I know. We've heard this feature request a few times already. >> That's why - no promises! - this feature is currently being discussed >> for 10.2. >> >> > 7. I head a rumor that some kind of JSON features are coming to Maria. >> >> I wonder what exactly you've heard and where :) >> There are many different ways of implementing "JSON features", some of >> them actually use dynamic columns as the underlying storage format. >> >> Currently there is no well defined JSON task in mariadb.org/jira, >> so nobody knows what exactly will be implemented yet. >> >> But now is the time to affect the 10.2 roadmap. What "JSON features" >> would you like to see in MariaDB? >> >> Regards, >> Sergei >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~maria-discuss >> Post to : maria-discuss@lists.launchpad.net >> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~maria-discuss >> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp >> > > > > -- > Roberto Spadim > SPAEmpresarial - Software ERP > Eng. Automação e Controle > > _______________________________________________ > Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~maria-discuss > Post to : maria-discuss@lists.launchpad.net > Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~maria-discuss > More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp > >
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