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Basic introduction to KQL
NeilMacMullen edited this page May 6, 2024
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KQL is a query-only language with (IMO) a more user-friendly and flexible syntax than SQL. There are some similarities however:
- KQL expects to operate on tabular data; i.e. data is held in a two dimensional table consisting of rows and columns where columns have a type (text/number/boolean etc) and are all the same length.
- More complex operations can be performed by joining separate tables. For example you could join a table of products to a table of reviews by product-id then calculate the average rating by product category.
KQL allows for flexible and powerful queries using a "pipe" syntax...
Some examples
products | where Description contains 'laptop' and Price < 2000 | order by Price | take 10
products | extend PriceTier=bin(Price,500) | summarize count() by Category,PriceTier
products | where LaunchDate > date(1 jan 2023)
products | where Category=='PC' | join reviews on ProductId | summarize Rating=avg(Score) by ProductId | order by Rating
Queries can span multiple lines and by convention the pipe operator is placed at the beginning of each line.
products
| where Category=='PC'
| join reviews on ProductId
| summarize Rating=avg(Score) by ProductId
| order by Rating
Columns can be added using the extend
operator
products | extend PriceToNearest100=bin(Price,100)
A subset of columns can be selected for output using the project
operator
products
| extend PriceToNearest100=bin(Price,100)
| project Name,Price,PriceToNearest100