5.8 KiB
Making Calls to the SQL API
CartoDB is based on the rock solid PostgreSQL database. All of your tables reside a single database, which means you can perform complex queries joining tables, or carrying out geospatial operations. The best place to learn about PostgreSQL's SQL language is the official documentation.
CartoDB is also based on PostGIS, so take a look at the official PostGIS reference to know what functionality we support in terms of geospatial operations. All of our tables include a column called the_geom, which is a geometry field that indexes geometries in the EPSG:4326 (WGS 1984) coordinate system. All tables also have an automatically generated and updated column called the_geom_webmercator. We use the column internally to quickly create tiles for maps.
URL endpoints
All SQL API requests to your CartoDB account should follow this general pattern:
SQL query example
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?q={SQL statement}
If you encounter errors, double-check that you are using the correct account name, and that your SQL statement is valid. A simple example of this pattern is conducting a count of all the records in your table:
Count example
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?q=SELECT count(*) FROM {table_name}
Result
{
time: 0.007,
total_rows: 1,
rows: [
{
count: 4994
}
]
}
Finally, remember that in order to use the SQL API, either your table must be public, or you must be authenticated using API Keys, as discussed above.
POST and GET
The CartoDB SQL API is setup to handle both GET and POST requests. You can test the GET method directly in your browser. Below is an example of a jQuery SQL API request to CartoDB:
jQuery
Call
$.getJSON('https://'+your_account_name+'.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql/?q='+sql_statement, function(data) {
$.each(data.rows, function(key, val) {
// do something!
});
});
By default, GET requests work from anywhere. In CartoDB, POST requests work from any website as well. We achieve this by hosting a cross-domain policy file at the root of all of our servers. This allows you the greatest level of flexibility when developing your application.
Response formats
The standard response from the CartoDB SQL API is JSON. If you are building a web-application, the lightweight JSON format allows you to quickly integrate data from the SQL API.
JSON
Call
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?q=SELECT * FROM {table_name} LIMIT 1
Result
{
time: 0.006,
total_rows: 1,
rows: [
{
year: " 2011",
month: 10,
day: "11",
the_geom: "0101000020E610...",
cartodb_id: 1,
the_geom_webmercator: "0101000020110F000..."
}
]
}
Alternatively, you can use the GeoJSON specification to return data from the API. To do so, simply supply the format
parameter as GeoJSON:
GeoJSON
Call
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?format=GeoJSON&q=SELECT * FROM {table_name} LIMIT 1
Result
{
type: "FeatureCollection",
features: [
{
type: "Feature",
properties: {
year: " 2011",
month: 10,
day: "11",
cartodb_id: 1
},
geometry: {
type: "Point",
coordinates: [
-97.335,
35.498
]
}
}
]
}
The SQL API accepts other output formats that can be useful to export data. You can use the following formats: CSV, SHP, SVG, KML, SpatiaLite and GeoJSON.
Output filename
To customize the output filename, add the filename
parameter to your URL:
Call
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?filename={custom_filename}&q=SELECT * FROM {table_name} LIMIT 1
Getting table information
Currently, there is no public method to access your table schemas. The simplest way to retrieve table structure is to access the first row of the data,
Call
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?q=SELECT * FROM {table_name} LIMIT 1
Response errors
To help you debug your SQL queries, the CartoDB SQL API returns errors as part of the JSON response. Errors come back as follows,
Result
{
error: [
"syntax error at or near "LIMIT""
]
}
You can use these errors to help understand your SQL. See the SQL Errors section of the Error Codes and Solutions documentation for more information.
Write data to your CartoDB account
Performing inserts or updates on your data is simple using your API Key. All you need to do is supply a correct SQL INSERT or UPDATE statement for your table along with the api_key parameter for your account. Be sure to keep these requests private, as anyone with your API Key will be able to modify your tables. A correct SQL insert statement means that all the columns you want to insert into already exist in your table, and all the values for those columns are the right type (quoted string, unquoted string for geoms and dates, or numbers).
Insert
Call
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?q=INSERT INTO test_table (column_name, column_name_2, the_geom) VALUES ('this is a string', 11, ST_SetSRID(ST_Point(-110, 43),4326))&api_key={Your API key}
Updates are just as simple. Here is an example of updating a row based on the value of the cartodb_id column.
Update
Call
https://{account}.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql?q=UPDATE test_table SET column_name = 'my new string value' WHERE cartodb_id = 1 &api_key={Your API key}