Package Exports
- sql-json-generator
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Readme
sql-json-generator
Generate SQL command from JSON object
Create reusable json objects to quickly build SQL statments
Install
Install with npm install sql-json-generator
var SQLGenerator = require('sql-json-generator');
var sqlGenerator = new SQLGenerator();WIKI
Find mode complex queries examples on the project wiki
API
SELECT
sqlGenerator.select( queryData )
The first parameter contains the data used to produce the SQL query.
The function returns a string with the SQL. In case of error, will return null
example:
sqlParams = {
$from : 'table1',
$fields : [
'column_a',
'column_b',
'column_c'
],
$where : {
column_d: 1
}
}
sqlGenerator.select( sqlParams);will return:
SELECT `column_a`, `column_b`, `column_c` FROM `table1` WHERE `table1`.`column_d` = '1'INSERT
sqlGenerator.insert( queryData )
The first parameter contains the data used to produce the SQL query.
The function returns a string with the SQL. In case of error, will return null
example:
sqlParams = {
$insert: 'mytable',
$values : {
column_a: 1,
column_b: 1
}
}
sqlGenerator.insert( sqlParams);will return:
INSERT INTO `mytable` (`column_a`,`column_b`) VALUES ('1','1')UPDATE
sqlGenerator.update( queryData )
The first parameter contains the data used to produce the SQL query.
The function returns a string with the SQL. In case of error, will return null
example:
sqlParams = {
$update: 'mytable',
$set : {
column_b: 1
},
$where: {
column_a: 1
}
}
sqlGenerator.update( sqlParams);will return:
UPDATE `mytable` SET `column_b` = '1' WHERE `column_a` = '1'
$whereparameter is optional
DELETE
.delete( queryData )
The first parameter contains the data used to produce the SQL query.
The function returns a string with the SQL. In case of error, will return null
example:
sqlParams = {
$delete: 'mytable',
$where: {
column_a: 1
}
}
sqlGenerator.delete( sqlParams);will return:
UPDATE `mytable` SET `column_b` = '1' WHERE `column_a` = '1'
$whereparameter is optional
Formating queryData
SELECT
$from, $fields, $field: basic SELECT FROM query
Columns to be displayed in a SELECT statement are elements of an array. It can be just an array of columns names
example:
{
$from : 'table1',
$fields : [
'column_a',
'column_b'
]
}will return:
SELECT `table1`.`column_a`, `table1`.`column_b` FROM `table1`To apply extra SQL formats to the colums (such as AS, SUM) the column must be wrapped in an object:
example:
{
$from : 'table1',
$fields : [
{
$field: 'column_a'
},
{
$field: 'column_b'
},
]
}will return:
SELECT `table1`.`column_a`, `table1`.`column_b` FROM `table1`$field
$field : column_name
$fieldmust be used within an object.
table name is inherited from the parent table object ( $from, $inner ... )
$as
$as : alias name
$asmust be used within an object, with a$fieldproperty.
example:
{
$from : 'table1',
$fields : [
{
$field: 'column_a',
$as: 'column_a_as'
},
'column_b'
]
}will return:
SELECT `table1`.`column_a` AS column_a_as, `table1`.`column_b` FROM `table1`$dateFormat
$dateFormat : output date format (see SQL doc).
$dateFormatmust be used within an object, with a$fieldproperty.
example:
{
$from : 'table1',
$fields : [
{
$field: 'column_a',
$dateFormat : '%Y-%m-%d',
$as: 'column_date'
}
]
}will return:
SELECT DATE_FORMAT(`table1`.`column_a`,'%Y-%m-%d') AS column_date FROM `table1`$where
example:
{
$from : 'table1',
$fields : [
'column_a',
'column_b'
],
$where : {
'column_c' : 1
}
}will return:
SELECT `table1`.`column_a`, `table1`.`column_b` FROM `table1` WHERE `table1`.`column_c` = 1JOINS : $inner, $left, $right, $full
``
JOIN tables are placed as an element inside the
$fieldsarray of the parent table.
JOIN tables can be nested
| JSON | SQL |
|---|---|
$inner |
INNER JOIN |
$left |
LEFT JOIN |
$right |
RIGHT JOIN |
$full |
LEFT JOIN |
JOIN object must have one
$usingparameter JOIN object must have one$fieldsparameter
example:
{
$from : 'table1',
$fields : [
'column1a',
'column1b',
{
$inner : 'table2',
$using : 'column2a',
$fields : [
'column2a',
'column2b',
]
}
]
}will return:
SELECT `table1`.`column1a`, `table1`.`column1b`, `table2`.`column2a`, `table2`.`column2b` FROM `table1` INNER JOIN `table2` USING(`column2a`)$where
$where: { conditions... }
Logical Operators: $and and $or
{ $and : [{condition1}, {condition2}... ]} , { $or : [{condition1}, {condition2}... ]}
example:
{
$or : [
{column_a: 1},
{column_b: 1}
]
}will return:
(column_a = '1' OR column_b = '1')default behavior: $and
example:
{
column_a: 1,
column_b: 1,
column_c: 1
}will return:
column_a = '1' AND column_b = '1' AND column_c = '1'Comparaison Operators
{ column : { $gt : value }}
| JSON | SQL |
|---|---|
$gt |
> |
$gte |
>= |
$lt |
< |
$lte |
<= |
$eq |
= |
$ne |
<> |
example:
{
column_a: {
$gt: 1
}
}will return:
column_a > '1'$limit
$limit: { $offset : offset_value , $rows : rows_to_return }
example:
{
$limit : {
$offset: 0,
$rows: 10
}
}will return:
LIMIT 0,10$order
$order: [ list of fields ]
example:
{
$order : [
'column1',
'column2'
]
}will return:
ORDER BY current_table.column1, current_table.column2Elements of the $order array can be aliases names, previously defined, using the $as tag
example:
{
$fields: [
{
$field: 'column1'
$as : 'alias'
}
]
$order : [
{ $as : 'alias' }
]
}will return:
ORDER BY current_table.column1, current_table.column2
> If not using a $table tag, the current table will be used to build the command