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Aggregate Functions

Aggregate functions perform a computation against a set of values to generate a single result. For example, you could use an aggregate function to compute the average (mean) order over a period of time. Aggregations can be applied as standard functions or used as part of a transformation step to reshape the data.

Note

Output order of nested values from an aggregation function cannot be determined in advance. The work to generate output values is done in parallel, which results in different ordering of any nested values for each execution run for each running environment.

Aggregate across an entire column:

Transformation Name

New formula

Parameter: Formula type

Single row formula

Parameter: Formula

average(Scores)

Output: Generates a new column containing the average of all values in the Scores column.

Transformation Name

Pivot columns

Parameter: Values

average(Score)

Parameter: Max number of columns to create

1

Output: Generates a single-column table with a single value, which contains the average of all values in the Scores column. The limit defines the maximum number of columns that can be generated.

Note

When aggregate functions are applied as part of a pivot transformation, they typically involve multiple parameters as part of an operation to reshape the dataset. See below.

Aggregate across groups of values within a column:

Aggregate functions can be used with the pivot transformation to change the structure of your data. Example:

Transformation Name

Pivot columns

Parameter: Row labels

StudentId

Parameter: Values

average(Score)

Parameter: Max number of columns to create

1

In the above instance, the resulting dataset contains two columns:

  • studentId - one row for each distinct student ID value

  • average_Scores - average score by each student (studentId)

Note

You cannot use aggregate functions inside of conditionals that evaluate to true or false.

A pivot transformation can include multiple aggregate functions and group columns from the pre-aggregate dataset. See Pivot Transform.

Note

Null values are ignored as inputs to these functions.

These aggregate functions are available: