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Operators
All operators are transformed to their corresponding functions at the query parsing stage in accordance with their precedence and associativity. Groups of operators are listed in order of priority (the higher it is in the list, the earlier the operator is connected to its arguments).
Access Operators
a[N]
– Access to an element of an array. The arrayElement(a, N)
function.
a.N
– Access to a tuple element. The tupleElement(a, N)
function.
Numeric Negation Operator
-a
– The negate (a)
function.
Multiplication and Division Operators
a * b
– The multiply (a, b)
function.
a / b
– The divide(a, b)
function.
a % b
– The modulo(a, b)
function.
Addition and Subtraction Operators
a + b
– The plus(a, b)
function.
a - b
– The minus(a, b)
function.
Comparison Operators
a = b
– The equals(a, b)
function.
a == b
– The equals(a, b)
function.
a != b
– The notEquals(a, b)
function.
a <> b
– The notEquals(a, b)
function.
a <= b
– The lessOrEquals(a, b)
function.
a >= b
– The greaterOrEquals(a, b)
function.
a < b
– The less(a, b)
function.
a > b
– The greater(a, b)
function.
a LIKE s
– The like(a, b)
function.
a NOT LIKE s
– The notLike(a, b)
function.
a BETWEEN b AND c
– The same as a >= b AND a <= c
.
a NOT BETWEEN b AND c
– The same as a < b OR a > c
.
Operators for Working With Data Sets
See IN operators.
a IN ...
– The in(a, b)
function.
a NOT IN ...
– The notIn(a, b)
function.
a GLOBAL IN ...
– The globalIn(a, b)
function.
a GLOBAL NOT IN ...
– The globalNotIn(a, b)
function.
Operators for Working with Dates and Times
EXTRACT
EXTRACT(part FROM date);
Extracts a part from a given date. For example, you can retrieve a month from a given date, or a second from a time.
The part
parameter specifies which part of the date to retrieve. The following values are available:
DAY
— The day of the month. Possible values: 1–31.MONTH
— The number of a month. Possible values: 1–12.YEAR
— The year.SECOND
— The second. Possible values: 0–59.MINUTE
— The minute. Possible values: 0–59.HOUR
— The hour. Possible values: 0–23.
The part
parameter is case-insensitive.
The date
parameter specifies the date or the time to process. Either Date or DateTime type is supported.
Examples:
SELECT EXTRACT(DAY FROM toDate('2017-06-15'));
SELECT EXTRACT(MONTH FROM toDate('2017-06-15'));
SELECT EXTRACT(YEAR FROM toDate('2017-06-15'));
In the following example we create a table and insert into it a value with the DateTime
type.
CREATE TABLE test.Orders
(
OrderId UInt64,
OrderName String,
OrderDate DateTime
)
ENGINE = Log;
INSERT INTO test.Orders VALUES (1, 'Jarlsberg Cheese', toDateTime('2008-10-11 13:23:44'));
SELECT
toYear(OrderDate) AS OrderYear,
toMonth(OrderDate) AS OrderMonth,
toDayOfMonth(OrderDate) AS OrderDay,
toHour(OrderDate) AS OrderHour,
toMinute(OrderDate) AS OrderMinute,
toSecond(OrderDate) AS OrderSecond
FROM test.Orders;
┌─OrderYear─┬─OrderMonth─┬─OrderDay─┬─OrderHour─┬─OrderMinute─┬─OrderSecond─┐
│ 2008 │ 10 │ 11 │ 13 │ 23 │ 44 │
└───────────┴────────────┴──────────┴───────────┴─────────────┴─────────────┘
You can see more examples in tests.
INTERVAL
Creates an Interval-type value that should be used in arithmetical operations with Date and DateTime-type values.
Types of intervals:
SECOND
MINUTE
HOUR
DAY
WEEK
MONTH
QUARTER
YEAR
!!! warning "Warning"
Intervals with different types can’t be combined. You can’t use expressions like INTERVAL 4 DAY 1 HOUR
. Express intervals in units that are smaller or equal the the smallest unit of the interval, for example INTERVAL 25 HOUR
. You can use consequtive operations like in the example below.
Example:
SELECT now() AS current_date_time, current_date_time + INTERVAL 4 DAY + INTERVAL 3 HOUR
┌───current_date_time─┬─plus(plus(now(), toIntervalDay(4)), toIntervalHour(3))─┐
│ 2019-10-23 11:16:28 │ 2019-10-27 14:16:28 │
└─────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
See Also
- Interval data type
- toInterval type convertion functions
Logical Negation Operator
NOT a
– The not(a)
function.
Logical AND Operator
a AND b
– Theand(a, b)
function.
Logical OR Operator
a OR b
– The or(a, b)
function.
Conditional Operator
a ? b : c
– The if(a, b, c)
function.
Note:
The conditional operator calculates the values of b and c, then checks whether condition a is met, and then returns the corresponding value. If b
or C
is an arrayJoin() function, each row will be replicated regardless of the “a” condition.
Conditional Expression
CASE [x]
WHEN a THEN b
[WHEN ... THEN ...]
[ELSE c]
END
If x
is specified, then transform(x, [a, ...], [b, ...], c)
function is used. Otherwise – multiIf(a, b, ..., c)
.
If there is no ELSE c
clause in the expression, the default value is NULL
.
The transform
function does not work with NULL
.
Concatenation Operator
s1 || s2
– The concat(s1, s2) function.
Lambda Creation Operator
x -> expr
– The lambda(x, expr) function.
The following operators do not have a priority, since they are brackets:
Array Creation Operator
[x1, ...]
– The array(x1, ...) function.
Tuple Creation Operator
(x1, x2, ...)
– The tuple(x2, x2, ...) function.
Associativity
All binary operators have left associativity. For example, 1 + 2 + 3
is transformed to plus(plus(1, 2), 3)
.
Sometimes this doesn’t work the way you expect. For example, SELECT 4 > 2 > 3
will result in 0.
For efficiency, the and
and or
functions accept any number of arguments. The corresponding chains of AND
and OR
operators are transformed to a single call of these functions.
Checking for NULL
ClickHouse supports the IS NULL
and IS NOT NULL
operators.
IS NULL
- For Nullable type values, the
IS NULL
operator returns:1
, if the value isNULL
.0
otherwise.
- For other values, the
IS NULL
operator always returns0
.
SELECT x+100 FROM t_null WHERE y IS NULL
┌─plus(x, 100)─┐
│ 101 │
└──────────────┘
IS NOT NULL
- For Nullable type values, the
IS NOT NULL
operator returns:0
, if the value isNULL
.1
otherwise.
- For other values, the
IS NOT NULL
operator always returns1
.
SELECT * FROM t_null WHERE y IS NOT NULL
┌─x─┬─y─┐
│ 2 │ 3 │
└───┴───┘