Build Custom Formula Functions
You can create custom functions that users can access in Designer anywhere that an Expression Editor is available in the tool configuration. To create custom functions, you...
Writing an XML file, which wraps parameters into other function calls.
Writing a C-style DLL.
Regardless of the method of creation, the functions are made available to Designer using an XML formula function file, which must contain the following attributes:
<name>
: A unique name that appears in the functions list.<NumParams>
: The number of parameters the function accepts.<Category>
: The function category that displays the function. This can be a new category or an existing one.<InsertText>
: The boilerplate text that is inserted into the expression editor when the function is used.<Description>
: A description that displays when the function is hovered over.
Benutzerdefinierte Formelfunktionen
Wenn Sie benutzerdefinierte Formelfunktionen verwenden und Ihre benutzerdefinierte Funktion denselben Namen wie eine vorhandene Alteryx-Funktion (oder eine neu eingeführte Alteryx-Funktion) hat, können unerwartete Ergebnisse und Konflikte auftreten.
Um dieses Problem zu beheben, benennen Sie Ihre benutzerdefinierte Funktion um (oder fügen Sie ein Präfix/Suffix hinzu), um sie von den in der Basisinstallation vorhandenen Designer-Funktionen zu unterscheiden.
Build Using XML
When creating a function using only XML, the file's structure follows that of the example below:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <FormulaAddIn> <Function> <Name>Sample_XML</Name> <NumParams variable="false">3</NumParams> <Category>Sample</Category> <InsertText>Sample_XML(Num1, Num2, Num3)</InsertText> <Description>Obtains the average of three numbers.</Description> <Formula>((P1+P2+P3)/3)</Formula> </Function> </FormulaAddIn>
The NumParams
element has an attribute variable
. The attribute is set to false because the number of parameters accepted is fixed. When using only XML to create a function, the number of parameters accepted is always fixed.
The Formula
element contains the formula that actually performs the work. The contents are not visible to the user. The parameters are always referenced as P1
, P2
, P3
, and so on, regardless of the text presented in InsertText
.
To add a second function to the same XML file, create another Function
element within the FormulaAddIn
element.
Build Using a DLL and XML
To use a DLL, write your desired function, then export it from the DLL. Assuming the exported function is defined as:
struct FormulaAddInData{ int nVarType; // 1 for double, 2 for wchar_t int isNull; // 1 if NULL, 0 if valid double dVal; // valid if nVarType==1 && isNull==0 const wchar_t * pVal; // valid if nVarType==2 && isNull==0 };
The exported function has the signature:
typedef long ( _stdcall * FormulaAddInPlugin)(int nNumArgs, FormulaAddInData *pArgs, FormulaAddInData *pReturnValue);
nNumArgs
contains the actual number of arguments in the call.
pArgs
points to an array of the actual arguments.
The function should return a 1 to signal success and a 0 to signal failure.
pReturnValue
returns the computed result if the call is successful or a string error message if the call is unsuccessful. Any returned strings must be allocated with GlobalAlloc, and Alteryx Designer manages freeing the string.
With the DLL successfully set up, you need to reference the DLL from the XML file.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <FormulaAddIn> <Function> <Name>AddInData</Name> <NumParams variable="true">3</NumParams> <Category>Sample</Category> <InsertText>AddInData(VarType, isNull, double)</InsertText> <Description>Verifies data type before adding data.</Description> <Dll> <Name>AddInData</Name> <EntryPoint>FormulaAddInData</EntryPoint> </Dll> </Function> </FormulaAddIn>
The NumParams
element has an attribute variable
. The attribute is set to true
because the number of parameters accepted is variable. When using a variable number of parameters, the value should equal the minimum required number.
The Dll
element contains two child elements that provide the needed information about the DLL.
<Name>
: The name of the DLL file.<EntryPoint>
: The name of the exported function being used.
Access Functions in Designer
To make the functions available in Alteryx Designer, go to the RuntimeData folder in your Alteryx Designer installation. Check for a folder titled \FormulaAddIn. If the folder does not exist, create it.
Sample XML in FormulaAddIn
The folder contains Sample.xml, a file that is correctly configured. Add a category, save the file, and restart Alteryx Designer to see the sample function.
C:\Program Files\Alteryx\bin\RuntimeData\FormulaAddIn
Save your XML file to the \FormulaAddIn
directory. If using DLL, save the related DLL file in the same place. The standard naming convention is to name the DLL and XML files to match.
In the case of two Designer instances running simultaneously on one machine (Admin and Non-Admin), the XML file with custom formula functions should be separate for both versions via different paths to be displayed in the Designer GUI.
For the Non-Admin version, the path is
C:\Program Files\Alteryx\bin\RuntimeData\FormulaAddIn
.For the Admin version, the path is
C:\Alteryx\RuntimeData\FormulaAddIn
.