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Map Data with DataWeave

This DataWeave example uses the DataWeave map function to iterate through an array of books and perform a series of tasks on each. Before you begin, note that DataWeave version 2 (%dw 2.0) is for Mule 4 apps. For a Mule 3 app, refer to DataWeave version 1 (%dw 1.0) examples, within the Mule 3.9 documentation set. For other Mule versions, you can use the Mule Runtime version selector in the table of contents.

The example uses these DataWeave functions:

  • map to go through each object in the books array.

  • as to coerce the price data into a Number type, which ensures that the transformation generates the correct type for each element.

DataWeave Script:
%dw 2.0
output application/json
---
items: payload.books map (item, index) -> {
      book: item mapObject (value, key) -> {
      (upper(key)): value
      }
}
Input JSON Payload:
{
    "books": [
      {
        "-category": "cooking",
        "title":"Everyday Italian",
        "author": "Giada De Laurentiis",
        "year": "2005",
        "price": "30.00"
      },
      {
        "-category": "children",
        "title": "Harry Potter",
        "author": "J K. Rowling",
        "year": "2005",
        "price": "29.99"
      },
      {
        "-category": "web",
        "title":  "XQuery Kick Start",
        "author": [
          "James McGovern",
          "Per Bothner",
          "Kurt Cagle",
          "James Linn",
          "Vaidyanathan Nagarajan"
        ],
        "year": "2003",
        "price": "49.99"
      },
      {
        "-category": "web",
        "-cover": "paperback",
        "title": "Learning XML",
        "author": "Erik T. Ray",
        "year": "2003",
        "price": "39.95"
      }
    ]
}
Output JSON:
{
  "items": [
    {
      "book": {
        "-CATEGORY": "cooking",
        "TITLE": "Everyday Italian",
        "AUTHOR": "Giada De Laurentiis",
        "YEAR": "2005",
        "PRICE": "30.00"
      }
    },
    {
      "book": {
        "-CATEGORY": "children",
        "TITLE": "Harry Potter",
        "AUTHOR": "J K. Rowling",
        "YEAR": "2005",
        "PRICE": "29.99"
      }
    },
    {
      "book": {
        "-CATEGORY": "web",
        "TITLE": "XQuery Kick Start",
        "AUTHOR": [
          "James McGovern",
          "Per Bothner",
          "Kurt Cagle",
          "James Linn",
          "Vaidyanathan Nagarajan"
        ],
        "YEAR": "2003",
        "PRICE": "49.99"
      }
    },
    {
      "book": {
        "-CATEGORY": "web",
        "-COVER": "paperback",
        "TITLE": "Learning XML",
        "AUTHOR": "Erik T. Ray",
        "YEAR": "2003",
        "PRICE": "39.95"
      }
    }
  ]
}
Note that when a book has multiple authors, item.author evaluates to the entire array of authors instead of a single name.

Using Default Values

The following example performs the same transformation as above, but it doesn’t explicitly define the properties "item" and "index". Instead, it calls them through the default names: $ and $$ respectively.

DataWeave Script:
%dw 2.0
output application/json
---
items: (payload.books map {
      category: "book",
      price: $.price as Number,
      id: $$,
      properties: {
        title: $.title,
        author: $.author,
        year: $.year as Number
      }
})
Input JSON Payload:
{
    "books": [
      {
        "-category": "cooking",
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "Everyday Italian"
        },
        "author": "Giada De Laurentiis",
        "year": "2005",
        "price": "30.00"
      },
      {
        "-category": "children",
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "Harry Potter"
        },
        "author": "J K. Rowling",
        "year": "2005",
        "price": "29.99"
      },
      {
        "-category": "web",
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "XQuery Kick Start"
        },
        "author": [
          "James McGovern",
          "Per Bothner",
          "Kurt Cagle",
          "James Linn",
          "Vaidyanathan Nagarajan"
        ],
        "year": "2003",
        "price": "49.99"
      },
      {
        "-category": "web",
        "-cover": "paperback",
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "Learning XML"
        },
        "author": "Erik T. Ray",
        "year": "2003",
        "price": "39.95"
      }
    ]
}
Output JSON:
{
  "items": [
    {
      "category": "book",
      "price": 30.00,
      "id": 0,
      "properties": {
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "Everyday Italian"
        },
        "author": "Giada De Laurentiis",
        "year": 2005
      }
    },
    {
      "category": "book",
      "price": 29.99,
      "id": 1,
      "properties": {
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "Harry Potter"
        },
        "author": "J K. Rowling",
        "year": 2005
      }
    },
    {
      "category": "book",
      "price": 49.99,
      "id": 2,
      "properties": {
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "XQuery Kick Start"
        },
        "author": [
          "James McGovern",
          "Per Bothner",
          "Kurt Cagle",
          "James Linn",
          "Vaidyanathan Nagarajan"
        ],
        "year": 2003
      }
    },
    {
      "category": "book",
      "price": 39.95,
      "id": 3,
      "properties": {
        "title": {
          "-lang": "en",
          "#text": "Learning XML"
        },
        "author": "Erik T. Ray",
        "year": 2003
      }
    }
  ]
}