36

I have a typed xml document stored as text. So I use CONVERT the data type to xml by using a Common Table Expression in order to be able to use XML methods:

WITH xoutput AS (
  SELECT CONVERT(xml, t.requestpayload) 'requestpayload'
    FROM TABLE t
   WHERE t.methodid = 1)
SELECT x.requestpayload.query('declare namespace s="http://blah.ca/api";/s:validate-student-request/s:student-id') as studentid
  FROM xoutput x

Query works, returning to me the element. But I'm only interested in the value:

WITH xoutput AS (
  SELECT CONVERT(xml, t.requestpayload) 'requestpayload'
    FROM TABLE t
   WHERE t.methodid = 1)
SELECT x.requestpayload.value('declare namespace s="http://blah.ca/api";/s:validate-student-request/s:student-id', 'int') as studentid
  FROM xoutput x

This gives me the following error:

'value()' requires a singleton (or empty sequence), found operand of type 'xdt:untypedAtomic *'

What I've googled says that the XPATH/XQUERY needs to be inside parenthesis and/or needs "[1]" - neither has worked. There's only one student-id element in the xml, though I guess the schema allows for more?

Additionally, there are numerous element values I'd like to retrieve - is there a way to declare the namespace once rather than per method call?

3 Answers 3

71

You need to use this:

SELECT 
        x.requestpayload.value('declare namespace s="http://blah.ca/api";
            (/s:validate-student-request/s:student-id)[1]', 'int') 
    AS
        studentid
    FROM 
        xoutput x

You need to put your XPath in ( ... ) and add a [1] to simply select the first value of that sequence.

1
  • 1
    Great answer, this code run fast and is elegant. +1 Commented Nov 19, 2022 at 12:18
8

I believe this might also do:

SELECT 
   x.requestpayload.query('declare namespace s="http://blah.ca/api";
                           /s:validate-student-request/s:student-id').value('.', 'int') 
  as studentid
FROM xoutput x
4

For those interested in performance I ran a query to compare these approaches and the first option with "() and add a [1]" was MUCH faster than ".query('strFranchise').value('.',...)".

Difference in Execution plan was 15% to 85% when running one after the other on same data. So ()[1] is over 5 times faster! Execution plan is much different.

1
  • 1
    As I understand it [1] only returns the first result while .value('.' returns all results. Commented Nov 18, 2015 at 15:47

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