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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-7970?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14268341#comment-14268341
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Robert Stupp commented on CASSANDRA-7970:
-----------------------------------------

[~thobbs] I was a bit confused about the discussion because I thought there 
were plans to allow string encoded numbers everywhere in CQL. Guess, now I got 
it :)

TLDR -  I'm okay with accepting numbers in strings in JSON:
I think that we should only use string representation where the JSON spec gives 
us no other option (that's on 'object names' / 'map keys'). OK, it's a 
different thing whether we _accept_ numbers in strings or whether we _produce_. 
IMO we should produce numbers (and not numbers as strings) for JSON object 
values. Unfortunately I've no better argument than "follow the spec". But OTOH 
it does not matter whether number parsing in antlr fails or whether a 
Float.parseFloat fails and JSON "spec" does not force us to not encode numbers 
in strings.

> JSON support for CQL
> --------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-7970
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-7970
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: API
>            Reporter: Jonathan Ellis
>            Assignee: Tyler Hobbs
>             Fix For: 3.0
>
>
> JSON is popular enough that not supporting it is becoming a competitive 
> weakness.  We can add JSON support in a way that is compatible with our 
> performance goals by *mapping* JSON to an existing schema: one JSON documents 
> maps to one CQL row.
> Thus, it is NOT a goal to support schemaless documents, which is a misfeature 
> [1] [2] [3].  Rather, it is to allow a convenient way to easily turn a JSON 
> document from a service or a user into a CQL row, with all the validation 
> that entails.
> Since we are not looking to support schemaless documents, we will not be 
> adding a JSON data type (CASSANDRA-6833) a la postgresql.  Rather, we will 
> map the JSON to UDT, collections, and primitive CQL types.
> Here's how this might look:
> {code}
> CREATE TYPE address (
>   street text,
>   city text,
>   zip_code int,
>   phones set<text>
> );
> CREATE TABLE users (
>   id uuid PRIMARY KEY,
>   name text,
>   addresses map<text, address>
> );
> INSERT INTO users JSON
> {‘id’: 4b856557-7153,
>    ‘name’: ‘jbellis’,
>    ‘address’: {“home”: {“street”: “123 Cassandra Dr”,
>                         “city”: “Austin”,
>                         “zip_code”: 78747,
>                         “phones”: [2101234567]}}};
> SELECT JSON id, address FROM users;
> {code}
> (We would also want to_json and from_json functions to allow mapping a single 
> column's worth of data.  These would not require extra syntax.)
> [1] http://rustyrazorblade.com/2014/07/the-myth-of-schema-less/
> [2] https://blog.compose.io/schema-less-is-usually-a-lie/
> [3] http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2481247



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