For jq >= v1.7
The builtin function pick
is useful to slice objects (i.e. projection).
$ cat example.ndjson | jq -c 'pick(.login, .id)'
{"login":"dmaxfield","id":7449977}
{"login":"eiffel","id":7449978}
Nested objects can be handled nicely, too.
$ cat example.ndjson | jq -c 'pick(.login, .id, .nested.obj)'
{"login":"dmaxfield","id":7449977,"nested":{"obj":1.23}}
{"login":"eiffel","id":7449978,"nested":{"obj":4.56}}
If your input is formatted as JSON instead of NDJSON, prepend the script with .[]
.
$ cat example.json | jq '.[] | pick(.login, .id)' | jq -s '.'
[
{
"login": "dmaxfield",
"id": 7449977
},
{
"login": "eiffel",
"id": 7449978
}
]
For jq < v1.7
Use { login, id }
, which is a shorthand for { login: .login, id: .id }
.
$ cat example.ndjson | jq -c '{ login, id }'
{"login":"dmaxfield","id":7449977}
{"login":"eiffel","id":7449978}
For nested objects, write like this:
$ cat example.ndjson | jq -c '{ login, id, nested: { obj: .nested.obj } }'
{"login":"dmaxfield","id":7449977,"nested":{"obj":1.23}}
{"login":"eiffel","id":7449978,"nested":{"obj":4.56}}
For normal JSON files:
$ cat example.json | jq '.[] | { login, id }' | jq -s '.'
[
{
"login": "dmaxfield",
"id": 7449977
},
{
"login": "eiffel",
"id": 7449978
}
]
Notes
I used the following NDJSON file and JSON file.
$ cat example.ndjson
{ "login": "dmaxfield", "id": 7449977, "foo": true, "nested": { "obj": 1.23 } }
{ "login": "eiffel", "id": 7449978, "foo": false, "nested": { "obj": 4.56 } }
$ cat example.json
[
{ "login": "dmaxfield", "id": 7449977, "foo": true, "nested": { "obj": 1.23 } },
{ "login": "eiffel", "id": 7449978, "foo": false, "nested": { "obj": 4.56 } }
]