I'm testing different ways that I can implement CQRS. One of my test uses FOR JSON queries to bypass any type of ORM, much like described here. Another implementation I wanted to test was, instead of creating the JSON data on-the-fly, to create an key-value type indexed view where the key is some identifier and the data is the JSON data created from the 'actual' data. For data stores that are updated sparingly but read frequently, this would seem like a smart thing to do. The problem is how to create the indexed view, something like the following.
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[JsonTest]
(
[Number] [NVARCHAR](50) NULL,
[Date] [DATETIME] NULL,
[Customer] [NVARCHAR](50) NULL,
[Price] [MONEY] NULL,
[Quantity] [INT] NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
CREATE VIEW dbo.CustomerOrders
WITH SCHEMABINDING
AS
(
SELECT
customer,
(SELECT
Customer AS AccountNumber,
Number AS [Order.Number],
Date AS [Order.Date],
Price AS 'Item.UnitPrice',
Quantity AS 'Item.Qty'
FROM
dbo.JsonTest
WHERE
Customer = j.Customer
FOR JSON PATH, ROOT('Orders')) AS data
FROM
dbo.JsonTest j);
The problem is you can't create an indexed view from a view with subqueries. When using FOR JSON the entire query result is converted to JSON. What I need is the ability to convert the data in some columns into JSON.
Customer
if it's not indexed already and see if that's already enough; the bottleneck will be reading the row data, not producing the JSON.