Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Window function (SQL)

Function over multiple rows in SQL From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

In SQL, a window function or analytic function[1] is a function which uses values from one or multiple rows to return a value for each row. (This contrasts with an aggregate function, which returns a single value for multiple rows.) Window functions have an OVER clause; any function without an OVER clause is not a window function, but rather an aggregate or single-row (scalar) function.[2]

Remove ads

Example

Summarize
Perspective

As an example, here is a query which uses a window function to compare the salary of each employee with the average salary of their department (example from the PostgreSQL documentation):[3]

SELECT depname, empno, salary, avg(salary) OVER (PARTITION BY depname) FROM empsalary;

Output:

 depname  | empno | salary |          avg          
----------+-------+--------+----------------------
develop   |    11 |   5200 | 5020.0000000000000000
develop   |     7 |   4200 | 5020.0000000000000000
develop   |     9 |   4500 | 5020.0000000000000000
develop   |     8 |   6000 | 5020.0000000000000000
develop   |    10 |   5200 | 5020.0000000000000000
personnel |     5 |   3500 | 3700.0000000000000000
personnel |     2 |   3900 | 3700.0000000000000000
sales     |     3 |   4800 | 4866.6666666666666667
sales     |     1 |   5000 | 4866.6666666666666667
sales     |     4 |   4800 | 4866.6666666666666667
(10 rows)

The PARTITION BY clause groups rows into partitions, and the function is applied to each partition separately. If the PARTITION BY clause is omitted (such as with an empty OVER() clause), then the entire result set is treated as a single partition.[4] For this query, the average salary reported would be the average taken over all rows.

Window functions are evaluated after aggregation (after the GROUP BY clause and non-window aggregate functions, for example).[1]

Remove ads

Syntax

According to the PostgreSQL documentation, a window function has the syntax of one of the following:[4]

function_name ([expression [, expression ... ]]) OVER window_name
function_name ([expression [, expression ... ]]) OVER ( window_definition )
function_name ( * ) OVER window_name
function_name ( * ) OVER ( window_definition )

where window_definition has syntax:

[ existing_window_name ]
[ PARTITION BY expression [, ...] ]
[ ORDER BY expression [ ASC | DESC | USING operator ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ] [, ...] ]
[ frame_clause ]

frame_clause has the syntax of one of the following:

{ RANGE | ROWS | GROUPS } frame_start [ frame_exclusion ]
{ RANGE | ROWS | GROUPS } BETWEEN frame_start AND frame_end [ frame_exclusion ]

frame_start and frame_end can be UNBOUNDED PRECEDING, offset PRECEDING, CURRENT ROW, offset FOLLOWING, or UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING. frame_exclusion can be EXCLUDE CURRENT ROW, EXCLUDE GROUP, EXCLUDE TIES, or EXCLUDE NO OTHERS.

expression refers to any expression that does not contain a call to a window function.

Notation:

  • Brackets [] indicate optional clauses
  • Curly braces {} indicate a set of different possible options, with each option delimited by a vertical bar |
Remove ads

Example

Summarize
Perspective

Window functions allow access to data in the records right before and after the current record.[5][6][7][8] A window function defines a frame or window of rows with a given length around the current row, and performs a calculation across the set of data in the window.[9][10]

      NAME |
------------
      Aaron| <-- Preceding (unbounded)
     Andrew|
     Amelia|
      James|
       Jill|
     Johnny| <-- 1st preceding row
    Michael| <-- Current row
       Nick| <-- 1st following row
    Ophelia|
       Zach| <-- Following (unbounded)

In the above table, the next query extracts for each row the values of a window with one preceding and one following row:

 SELECT
  LAG(name, 1) 
    OVER(ORDER BY name) "prev",
  name, 
  LEAD(name, 1) 
    OVER(ORDER BY name) "next"
 FROM people
 ORDER BY name

The result query contains the following values:

|     PREV |     NAME |     NEXT |
|----------|----------|----------|
|    (null)|     Aaron|    Andrew|
|     Aaron|    Andrew|    Amelia|
|    Andrew|    Amelia|     James|
|    Amelia|     James|      Jill|
|     James|      Jill|    Johnny|
|      Jill|    Johnny|   Michael|
|    Johnny|   Michael|      Nick|
|   Michael|      Nick|   Ophelia|
|      Nick|   Ophelia|      Zach|
|   Ophelia|      Zach|    (null)|

History

Window functions were incorporated into the SQL:2003 standard and had functionality expanded in later specifications.[11]

Support for particular database implementations was added as follows:

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads