I have a JSON output as follows:
{ "example": { "sub-example": [ { "name": "123-345", "tag" : 100 }, { "name": "234-456", "tag" : 100 }, { "name": "4a7-a07a5", "tag" : 100 } ] } } I want to extract the values of the three "name" fields and store it in three variables.
I tried cat json_file | jq '.["example.sub-example.name"]' to extract the value of the "name" field but that doesn't work.
Can anyone tell me how to achieve this using jq (or some other method)?
3 Answers
If you just want to extract the name fields, the command you're looking for is jq '.example."sub-example" | .[] | .name'. If you want to keep the names in an array, wrap the whole jq expression in square brackets.
In jq 1.3, you can use the filter to extract the values:
.example["sub-example"] | .[] | .name Or more compactly:
.example["sub-example"][].name These of course also work with later versions of jq as well.
Reading into shell variables
Rather than populating separate shell variables (which would require knowing in advance how many values there are), consider populating a shell array. For example, using a bash shell with mapfile (aka readarray):
mapfile -t ary < <(< json_file jq '.example."sub-example"[].name') You could alternatively use a shell while loop. Etc etc. There are many SO Qs on this topic.
It's been a few years and I recently had to do this myself so thought I should post another way here.
You can also use map() to extract specific fields. e.g.
.example."sub-example"|map(.name)