Getting Started
Connecting to JSON
Establishing a Connection shows how to authenticate to JSON and configure any necessary connection properties. You can create a connection profile by clicking Get Data and selecting From JSON on the CData ribbon.
Advanced Configurations
You can also configure add-in capabilities through the available Connection properties, from data modeling to firewall traversal. The Advanced Settings section shows how to set up more advanced add-in configurations and troubleshoot connection errors.
Configuring a Connection Profile
You can configure access control in a connection profile by defining the operations allowed against JSON data and store the profile in the workbook to make the workbook easy to share. See Managing Connections for more configuration options for connection profiles.
Connecting from Excel
The add-in adds controls to the Excel ribbon, standard Excel formulas, and VBA classes for writing macros.
JSON Version Support
The add-in models local and remote JSON data sources as bidirectional tables. These can be local JSON files or remote JSON streams: RESTful APIs or file stores hosted on FTP servers or popular cloud storage providers. The add-in abstracts processing JSON data and connecting to the remote data: HTTP/FTP, SSL/TLS, and authentication: The major authentication schemes are supported, including HTTP Basic, Digest, FTP, NTLM, and OAuth.
See Also
- See Using the Excel Add-In to work with JSON data from the CData ribbon.
- By Writing Parameterized Queries in the From JSON dialog, you can easily create a dynamic spreadsheet based on an underlying SQL SELECT query. Cell values provide the query's input parameters.
- Use the CData Excel Functions to execute multiple queries from the same sheet or to use cells and ranges to manipulate JSON data.
- See Using the Excel Add-In (VBA) to write macros that can automate any of the capabilities available on the ribbon.