# Count The Number Of Things In A JSON File JQ is a great tool for finding out the number of things in a JSON file. If the top-level contents of the JSON is a list, then you can pipe it directly to the [`length` function](https://stedolan.github.io/jq/manual/#length). ```bash // [1, 2, {"three": 4}] $ jq '. | length' data.json 3 ``` It works the same for counting the number of entries (key-value pairs) in a top-level JSON object. ```bash // { "hello": "world", "list": [1,2,3] } $ jq '. | length' data.json 2 ``` If you are trying to get the count of a nested value, navigate to it and then pipe that to `length`. ```bash // { "hello": "world", "list": [1,2,3] } $ jq '.list | length' data.json 3 ``` You can even count each value in a JSON object by transforming it into an array of the values with `[]`. ```bash // { "hello": "world", "list": [1,2,3] } $ jq '.[] | length' data.json 5 3 ``` Notice, the length of `"world"` is `5` characters and the length of `[1,2,3]` is `3` elements.