Window functions provide the ability to perform calculations across sets of rows that are related to the current query row. See Section 3.5 for an introduction to this feature, and Section 4.2.8 for syntax details.
The built-in window functions are listed in Table 9.60. Note that these functions must be invoked using window function syntax, i.e., an OVER
clause is required.
In addition to these functions, any built-in or user-defined general-purpose or statistical aggregate (i.e., not ordered-set or hypothetical-set aggregates) can be used as a window function; see Section 9.20 for a list of the built-in aggregates. Aggregate functions act as window functions only when an OVER
clause follows the call; otherwise they act as non-window aggregates and return a single row for the entire set.
All of the functions listed in Table 9.60 depend on the sort ordering specified by the ORDER BY
clause of the associated window definition. Rows that are not distinct when considering only the ORDER BY
columns are said to be peers. The four ranking functions (including cume_dist
) are defined so that they give the same answer for all peer rows.
Note that first_value
, last_value
, and nth_value
consider only the rows within the “window frame”, which by default contains the rows from the start of the partition through the last peer of the current row. This is likely to give unhelpful results for last_value
and sometimes also nth_value
. You can redefine the frame by adding a suitable frame specification (RANGE
, ROWS
or GROUPS
) to the OVER
clause. See Section 4.2.8 for more information about frame specifications.
When an aggregate function is used as a window function, it aggregates over the rows within the current row's window frame. An aggregate used with ORDER BY
and the default window frame definition produces a “running sum” type of behavior, which may or may not be what's wanted. To obtain aggregation over the whole partition, omit ORDER BY
or use ROWS BETWEEN UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING
. Other frame specifications can be used to obtain other effects.
The SQL standard defines a RESPECT NULLS
or IGNORE NULLS
option for lead
, lag
, first_value
, last_value
, and nth_value
. This is not implemented in PostgreSQL: the behavior is always the same as the standard's default, namely RESPECT NULLS
. Likewise, the standard's FROM FIRST
or FROM LAST
option for nth_value
is not implemented: only the default FROM FIRST
behavior is supported. (You can achieve the result of FROM LAST
by reversing the ORDER BY
ordering.)
cume_dist
computes the fraction of partition rows that are less than or equal to the current row and its peers, while percent_rank
computes the fraction of partition rows that are less than the current row, assuming the current row does not exist in the partition.
Function
Return Type
Description
row_number()
bigint
number of the current row within its partition, counting from 1
rank()
bigint
rank of the current row with gaps; same as row_number
of its first peer
dense_rank()
bigint
rank of the current row without gaps; this function counts peer groups
percent_rank()
double precision
relative rank of the current row: (rank
- 1) / (total partition rows - 1)
cume_dist()
double precision
cumulative distribution: (number of partition rows preceding or peer with current row) / total partition rows
ntile(
num_buckets
integer
)
integer
integer ranging from 1 to the argument value, dividing the partition as equally as possible
lag(
value
anyelement
[, offset
integer
[, default
anyelement
]])
same type as
value
returns value
evaluated at the row that is offset
rows before the current row within the partition; if there is no such row, instead return default
(which must be of the same type as value
). Both offset
and default
are evaluated with respect to the current row. If omitted, offset
defaults to 1 and default
to null
lead(
value
anyelement
[, offset
integer
[, default
anyelement
]])
same type as
value
returns value
evaluated at the row that is offset
rows after the current row within the partition; if there is no such row, instead return default
(which must be of the same type as value
). Both offset
and default
are evaluated with respect to the current row. If omitted, offset
defaults to 1 and default
to null
first_value(
value
any
)
same type as
value
returns value
evaluated at the row that is the first row of the window frame
last_value(
value
any
)
same type as
value
returns value
evaluated at the row that is the last row of the window frame
nth_value(
value
any
, nth
integer
)
same type as
value
returns value
evaluated at the row that is the nth
row of the window frame (counting from 1); null if no such row