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array.rst.txt

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Array Functions and Operators

Subscript Operator: []

The [] operator is used to access an element of an array and is indexed starting from one:

SELECT my_array[1] AS first_element

Concatenation Operator: ||

The || operator is used to concatenate an array with an array or an element of the same type:

SELECT ARRAY [1] || ARRAY [2]; -- [1, 2]
SELECT ARRAY [1] || 2; -- [1, 2]
SELECT 2 || ARRAY [1]; -- [2, 1]

Array Functions

.. function:: all_match(array(T), function(T,boolean)) -> boolean

    Returns whether all elements of an array match the given predicate. Returns ``true`` if all the elements
    match the predicate (a special case is when the array is empty); ``false`` if one or more elements don't
    match; ``NULL`` if the predicate function returns ``NULL`` for one or more elements and ``true`` for all
    other elements.
.. function:: any_match(array(T), function(T,boolean)) -> boolean

    Returns whether any elements of an array match the given predicate. Returns ``true`` if one or more
    elements match the predicate; ``false`` if none of the elements matches (a special case is when the
    array is empty); ``NULL`` if the predicate function returns ``NULL`` for one or more elements and ``false``
    for all other elements.
.. function:: array_distinct(x) -> array

    Remove duplicate values from the array ``x``.
.. function:: array_intersect(x, y) -> array

    Returns an array of the elements in the intersection of ``x`` and ``y``, without duplicates.
.. function:: array_union(x, y) -> array

    Returns an array of the elements in the union of ``x`` and ``y``, without duplicates.
.. function:: array_except(x, y) -> array

    Returns an array of elements in ``x`` but not in ``y``, without duplicates.
.. function:: array_join(x, delimiter, null_replacement) -> varchar

    Concatenates the elements of the given array using the delimiter and an optional string to replace nulls.
.. function:: array_max(x) -> x

    Returns the maximum value of input array.
.. function:: array_min(x) -> x

    Returns the minimum value of input array.
.. function:: array_position(x, element) -> bigint

    Returns the position of the first occurrence of the ``element`` in array ``x`` (or 0 if not found).
.. function:: array_remove(x, element) -> array

    Remove all elements that equal ``element`` from array ``x``.
.. function:: array_sort(x) -> array

    Sorts and returns the array ``x``. The elements of ``x`` must be orderable.
    Null elements will be placed at the end of the returned array.
.. function:: array_sort(array(T), function(T,T,int)) -> array(T)

    Sorts and returns the ``array`` based on the given comparator ``function``. The comparator will take
    two nullable arguments representing two nullable elements of the ``array``. It returns -1, 0, or 1
    as the first nullable element is less than, equal to, or greater than the second nullable element.
    If the comparator function returns other values (including ``NULL``), the query will fail and raise an error ::

        SELECT array_sort(ARRAY [3, 2, 5, 1, 2], (x, y) -> IF(x < y, 1, IF(x = y, 0, -1))); -- [5, 3, 2, 2, 1]
        SELECT array_sort(ARRAY ['bc', 'ab', 'dc'], (x, y) -> IF(x < y, 1, IF(x = y, 0, -1))); -- ['dc', 'bc', 'ab']
        SELECT array_sort(ARRAY [3, 2, null, 5, null, 1, 2], -- sort null first with descending order
                          (x, y) -> CASE WHEN x IS NULL THEN -1
                                         WHEN y IS NULL THEN 1
                                         WHEN x < y THEN 1
                                         WHEN x = y THEN 0
                                         ELSE -1 END); -- [null, null, 5, 3, 2, 2, 1]
        SELECT array_sort(ARRAY [3, 2, null, 5, null, 1, 2], -- sort null last with descending order
                          (x, y) -> CASE WHEN x IS NULL THEN 1
                                         WHEN y IS NULL THEN -1
                                         WHEN x < y THEN 1
                                         WHEN x = y THEN 0
                                         ELSE -1 END); -- [5, 3, 2, 2, 1, null, null]
        SELECT array_sort(ARRAY ['a', 'abcd', 'abc'], -- sort by string length
                          (x, y) -> IF(length(x) < length(y),
                                       -1,
                                       IF(length(x) = length(y), 0, 1))); -- ['a', 'abc', 'abcd']
        SELECT array_sort(ARRAY [ARRAY[2, 3, 1], ARRAY[4, 2, 1, 4], ARRAY[1, 2]], -- sort by array length
                          (x, y) -> IF(cardinality(x) < cardinality(y),
                                       -1,
                                       IF(cardinality(x) = cardinality(y), 0, 1))); -- [[1, 2], [2, 3, 1], [4, 2, 1, 4]]
.. function:: arrays_overlap(x, y) -> boolean

    Tests if arrays ``x`` and ``y`` have any any non-null elements in common.
    Returns null if there are no non-null elements in common but either array contains null.
.. function:: cardinality(x) -> bigint

    Returns the cardinality (size) of the array ``x``.
.. function:: concat(array1, array2, ..., arrayN) -> array
    :noindex:

    Concatenates the arrays ``array1``, ``array2``, ``...``, ``arrayN``.
    This function provides the same functionality as the SQL-standard concatenation operator (``||``).
.. function:: combinations(array(T), n) -> array(array(T))

    Returns n-element subgroups of input array. If the input array has no duplicates,
    ``combinations`` returns n-element subsets::

         SELECT combinations(ARRAY['foo', 'bar', 'baz'], 2); -- [['foo', 'bar'], ['foo', 'baz'], ['bar', 'baz']]
         SELECT combinations(ARRAY[1, 2, 3], 2); -- [[1, 2], [1, 3], [2, 3]]
         SELECT combinations(ARRAY[1, 2, 2], 2); -- [[1, 2], [1, 2], [2, 2]]

    Order of subgroups is deterministic but unspecified. Order of elements within
    a subgroup deterministic but unspecified. ``n`` must be not be greater than 5,
    and the total size of subgroups generated must be smaller than 100000.
.. function:: contains(x, element) -> boolean

    Returns true if the array ``x`` contains the ``element``.
.. function:: element_at(array(E), index) -> E

    Returns element of ``array`` at given ``index``.
    If ``index`` > 0, this function provides the same functionality as the SQL-standard subscript operator (``[]``),
    except that the function returns ``NULL`` when accessing an ``index`` larger than array length, whereas
    the subscript operator would fail in such a case.
    If ``index`` < 0, ``element_at`` accesses elements from the last to the first.
.. function:: filter(array(T), function(T,boolean)) -> array(T)

    Constructs an array from those elements of ``array`` for which ``function`` returns true::

        SELECT filter(ARRAY [], x -> true); -- []
        SELECT filter(ARRAY [5, -6, NULL, 7], x -> x > 0); -- [5, 7]
        SELECT filter(ARRAY [5, NULL, 7, NULL], x -> x IS NOT NULL); -- [5, 7]
.. function:: flatten(x) -> array

    Flattens an ``array(array(T))`` to an ``array(T)`` by concatenating the contained arrays.
.. function:: ngrams(array(T), n) -> array(array(T))

    Returns ``n``-grams (sub-sequences of adjacent ``n`` elements) for the ``array``. The order
    of the ``n``-grams in the result is unspecified::

        SELECT ngrams(ARRAY['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo'], 2); -- [['foo', 'bar'], ['bar', 'baz'], ['baz', 'foo']]
        SELECT ngrams(ARRAY['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo'], 3); -- [['foo', 'bar', 'baz'], ['bar', 'baz', 'foo']]
        SELECT ngrams(ARRAY['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo'], 4); -- [['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo']]
        SELECT ngrams(ARRAY['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo'], 5); -- [['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo']]
        SELECT ngrams(ARRAY[1, 2, 3, 4], 2); -- [[1, 2], [2, 3], [3, 4]]
.. function:: none_match(array(T), function(T,boolean)) -> boolean

    Returns whether no elements of an array match the given predicate. Returns ``true`` if none of the elements
    matches the predicate (a special case is when the array is empty); ``false`` if one or more elements match;
    ``NULL`` if the predicate function returns ``NULL`` for one or more elements and ``false`` for all other elements.
.. function:: reduce(array(T), initialState S, inputFunction(S,T,S), outputFunction(S,R)) -> R

    Returns a single value reduced from ``array``. ``inputFunction`` will
    be invoked for each element in ``array`` in order. In addition to taking
    the element, ``inputFunction`` takes the current state, initially
    ``initialState``, and returns the new state. ``outputFunction`` will be
    invoked to turn the final state into the result value. It may be the
    identity function (``i -> i``). ::

        SELECT reduce(ARRAY [], 0, (s, x) -> s + x, s -> s); -- 0
        SELECT reduce(ARRAY [5, 20, 50], 0, (s, x) -> s + x, s -> s); -- 75
        SELECT reduce(ARRAY [5, 20, NULL, 50], 0, (s, x) -> s + x, s -> s); -- NULL
        SELECT reduce(ARRAY [5, 20, NULL, 50], 0, (s, x) -> s + COALESCE(x, 0), s -> s); -- 75
        SELECT reduce(ARRAY [5, 20, NULL, 50], 0, (s, x) -> IF(x IS NULL, s, s + x), s -> s); -- 75
        SELECT reduce(ARRAY [2147483647, 1], CAST (0 AS BIGINT), (s, x) -> s + x, s -> s); -- 2147483648
        SELECT reduce(ARRAY [5, 6, 10, 20], -- calculates arithmetic average: 10.25
                      CAST(ROW(0.0, 0) AS ROW(sum DOUBLE, count INTEGER)),
                      (s, x) -> CAST(ROW(x + s.sum, s.count + 1) AS ROW(sum DOUBLE, count INTEGER)),
                      s -> IF(s.count = 0, NULL, s.sum / s.count));
.. function:: repeat(element, count) -> array

    Repeat ``element`` for ``count`` times.
.. function:: reverse(x) -> array
    :noindex:

    Returns an array which has the reversed order of array ``x``.
.. function:: sequence(start, stop) -> array(bigint)

    Generate a sequence of integers from ``start`` to ``stop``, incrementing
    by ``1`` if ``start`` is less than or equal to ``stop``, otherwise ``-1``.
.. function:: sequence(start, stop, step) -> array(bigint)

    Generate a sequence of integers from ``start`` to ``stop``, incrementing by ``step``.
.. function:: sequence(start, stop) -> array(date)

    Generate a sequence of dates from ``start`` date to ``stop`` date, incrementing
    by ``1`` day if ``start`` date is less than or equal to ``stop`` date, otherwise ``-1`` day.
.. function:: sequence(start, stop, step) -> array(date)

    Generate a sequence of dates from ``start`` to ``stop``, incrementing by ``step``.
    The type of ``step`` can be either ``INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND`` or ``INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH``.
.. function:: sequence(start, stop, step) -> array(timestamp)

    Generate a sequence of timestamps from ``start`` to ``stop``, incrementing by ``step``.
    The type of ``step`` can be either ``INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND`` or ``INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH``.
.. function:: shuffle(x) -> array

    Generate a random permutation of the given array ``x``.
.. function:: slice(x, start, length) -> array

    Subsets array ``x`` starting from index ``start`` (or starting from the end
    if ``start`` is negative) with a length of ``length``.
.. function:: transform(array(T), function(T,U)) -> array(U)

    Returns an array that is the result of applying ``function`` to each element of ``array``::

        SELECT transform(ARRAY [], x -> x + 1); -- []
        SELECT transform(ARRAY [5, 6], x -> x + 1); -- [6, 7]
        SELECT transform(ARRAY [5, NULL, 6], x -> COALESCE(x, 0) + 1); -- [6, 1, 7]
        SELECT transform(ARRAY ['x', 'abc', 'z'], x -> x || '0'); -- ['x0', 'abc0', 'z0']
        SELECT transform(ARRAY [ARRAY [1, NULL, 2], ARRAY[3, NULL]], a -> filter(a, x -> x IS NOT NULL)); -- [[1, 2], [3]]
.. function:: zip(array1, array2[, ...]) -> array(row)

    Merges the given arrays, element-wise, into a single array of rows. The M-th element of
    the N-th argument will be the N-th field of the M-th output element.
    If the arguments have an uneven length, missing values are filled with ``NULL``. ::

        SELECT zip(ARRAY[1, 2], ARRAY['1b', null, '3b']); -- [ROW(1, '1b'), ROW(2, null), ROW(null, '3b')]
.. function:: zip_with(array(T), array(U), function(T,U,R)) -> array(R)

    Merges the two given arrays, element-wise, into a single array using ``function``.
    If one array is shorter, nulls are appended at the end to match the length of the longer array, before applying ``function``::

        SELECT zip_with(ARRAY[1, 3, 5], ARRAY['a', 'b', 'c'], (x, y) -> (y, x)); -- [ROW('a', 1), ROW('b', 3), ROW('c', 5)]
        SELECT zip_with(ARRAY[1, 2], ARRAY[3, 4], (x, y) -> x + y); -- [4, 6]
        SELECT zip_with(ARRAY['a', 'b', 'c'], ARRAY['d', 'e', 'f'], (x, y) -> concat(x, y)); -- ['ad', 'be', 'cf']
        SELECT zip_with(ARRAY['a'], ARRAY['d', null, 'f'], (x, y) -> coalesce(x, y)); -- ['a', null, 'f']