System (Built-in) Functions

System (Built-in) Functions #

Flink Table API & SQL provides users with a set of built-in functions for data transformations. This page gives a brief overview of them. If a function that you need is not supported yet, you can implement a user-defined function. If you think that the function is general enough, please open a Jira issue for it with a detailed description.

Scalar Functions #

The scalar functions take zero, one or more values as the input and return a single value as the result.

Comparison Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
value1 = value2 value1 === value2 Returns TRUE if value1 is equal to value2; returns UNKNOWN if value1 or value2 is NULL.
value1 <> value2 value1 !== value2 Returns TRUE if value1 is not equal to value2; returns UNKNOWN if value1 or value2 is NULL.
value1 > value2 value1 > value2 Returns TRUE if value1 is greater than value2; returns UNKNOWN if value1 or value2 is NULL.
value1 >= value2 value1 >= value2 Returns TRUE if value1 is greater than or equal to value2; returns UNKNOWN if value1 or value2 is NULL.
value1 < value2 value1 < value2 Returns TRUE if value1 is less than value2; returns UNKNOWN if value1 or value2 is NULL.
value1 <= value2 value1 <= value2 Returns TRUE if value1 is less than or equal to value2; returns UNKNOWN if value1 or value2 is NULL.
value IS NULL value.isNull Returns TRUE if value is NULL.
value IS NOT NULL value.isNotNull Returns TRUE if value is not NULL.
value1 IS DISTINCT FROM value2 N/A Returns TRUE if two values are different. NULL values are treated as identical here. E.g., 1 IS DISTINCT FROM NULL returns TRUE; NULL IS DISTINCT FROM NULL returns FALSE.
value1 IS NOT DISTINCT FROM value2 N/A Returns TRUE if two values are equal. NULL values are treated as identical here. E.g., 1 IS NOT DISTINCT FROM NULL returns FALSE; NULL IS NOT DISTINCT FROM NULL returns TRUE.
value1 BETWEEN [ ASYMMETRIC | SYMMETRIC ] value2 AND value3 N/A By default (or with the ASYMMETRIC keyword), returns TRUE if value1 is greater than or equal to value2 and less than or equal to value3. With the SYMMETRIC keyword, returns TRUE if value1 is inclusively between value2 and value3. When either value2 or value3 is NULL, returns FALSE or UNKNOWN. E.g., 12 BETWEEN 15 AND 12 returns FALSE; 12 BETWEEN SYMMETRIC 15 AND 12 returns TRUE; 12 BETWEEN 10 AND NULL returns UNKNOWN; 12 BETWEEN NULL AND 10 returns FALSE; 12 BETWEEN SYMMETRIC NULL AND 12 returns UNKNOWN.
value1 NOT BETWEEN [ ASYMMETRIC | SYMMETRIC ] value2 AND value3 N/A By default (or with the ASYMMETRIC keyword), returns TRUE if value1 is less than value2 or greater than value3. With the SYMMETRIC keyword, returns TRUE if value1 is not inclusively between value2 and value3. When either value2 or value3 is NULL, returns TRUE or UNKNOWN. E.g., 12 NOT BETWEEN 15 AND 12 returns TRUE; 12 NOT BETWEEN SYMMETRIC 15 AND 12 returns FALSE; 12 NOT BETWEEN NULL AND 15 returns UNKNOWN; 12 NOT BETWEEN 15 AND NULL returns TRUE; 12 NOT BETWEEN SYMMETRIC 12 AND NULL returns UNKNOWN.
string1 LIKE string2 [ ESCAPE char ] string1.like(string2) Returns TRUE if string1 matches pattern string2; returns UNKNOWN if string1 or string2 is NULL. An escape character can be defined if necessary. The escape character has not been supported yet.
string1 NOT LIKE string2 [ ESCAPE char ] N/A Returns TRUE if string1 does not match pattern string2; returns UNKNOWN if string1 or string2 is NULL. An escape character can be defined if necessary. The escape character has not been supported yet.
string1 SIMILAR TO string2 [ ESCAPE char ] string1.similar(string2) Returns TRUE if string1 matches SQL regular expression string2; returns UNKNOWN if string1 or string2 is NULL. An escape character can be defined if necessary. The escape character has not been supported yet.
string1 NOT SIMILAR TO string2 [ ESCAPE char ] N/A Returns TRUE if string1 does not match SQL regular expression string2; returns UNKNOWN if string1 or string2 is NULL. An escape character can be defined if necessary. The escape character has not been supported yet.
value1 IN (value2 [, value3]* ) value1.in(valu2) Returns TRUE if value1 exists in the given list (value2, value3, …). When (value2, value3, …). contains NULL, returns TRUE if the element can be found and UNKNOWN otherwise. Always returns UNKNOWN if value1 is NULL. E.g., 4 IN (1, 2, 3) returns FALSE; 1 IN (1, 2, NULL) returns TRUE; 4 IN (1, 2, NULL) returns UNKNOWN.
value1 NOT IN (value2 [, value3]* ) N/A Returns TRUE if value1 does not exist in the given list (value2, value3, …). When (value2, value3, …). contains NULL, returns FALSE if value1 can be found and UNKNOWN otherwise. Always returns UNKNOWN if value1 is NULL. E.g., 4 NOT IN (1, 2, 3) returns TRUE; 1 NOT IN (1, 2, NULL) returns FALSE; 4 NOT IN (1, 2, NULL) returns UNKNOWN.
EXISTS (sub-query) N/A Returns TRUE if sub-query returns at least one row. Only supported if the operation can be rewritten in a join and group operation. For streaming queries the operation is rewritten in a join and group operation. The required state to compute the query result might grow infinitely depending on the number of distinct input rows. Please provide a query configuration with valid retention interval to prevent excessive state size.
value IN (sub-query) value.in(TABLE) Returns TRUE if value is equal to a row returned by sub-query.
value NOT IN (sub-query) N/A Returns TRUE if value is not equal to a row returned by sub-query.
N/A value1.between(value2, value3) Returns TRUE if value1 is greater than or equal to value2 and less than or equal to value3. When either value2 or value3 is NULL, returns FALSE or UNKNOWN.
N/A value1.notBetween(value2, value3) Returns FALSE if value1 is greater than or equal to value2 and less than or equal to value3. When either value2 or value3 is NULL, returns TRUE or UNKNOWN.

Logical Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
boolean1 OR boolean2 BOOLEAN1 || BOOLEAN2 Returns TRUE if BOOLEAN1 is TRUE or BOOLEAN2 is TRUE. Supports three-valued logic. E.g., true || Null(BOOLEAN) returns TRUE.
boolean1 AND boolean2 BOOLEAN1 && BOOLEAN2 Returns TRUE if BOOLEAN1 and BOOLEAN2 are both TRUE. Supports three-valued logic. E.g., true && Null(BOOLEAN) returns UNKNOWN.
NOT boolean BOOLEAN.not(), not(BOOLEAN), or '!BOOLEAN' (Scala only) Returns TRUE if boolean is FALSE; returns FALSE if boolean is TRUE; returns UNKNOWN if boolean is UNKNOWN.
boolean IS FALSE BOOLEAN.isFalse Returns TRUE if boolean is FALSE; returns FALSE if boolean is TRUE or UNKNOWN.
boolean IS NOT FALSE BOOLEAN.isNotFalse Returns TRUE if BOOLEAN is TRUE or UNKNOWN; returns FALSE if BOOLEAN is FALSE.
boolean IS TRUE BOOLEAN.isTrue Returns TRUE if BOOLEAN is TRUE; returns FALSE if BOOLEAN is FALSE or UNKNOWN.
boolean IS NOT TRUE BOOLEAN.isNotTrue Returns TRUE if boolean is FALSE or UNKNOWN; returns FALSE if boolean is TRUE.
boolean IS UNKNOWN N/A Returns TRUE if boolean is UNKNOWN; returns FALSE if boolean is TRUE or FALSE.
boolean IS NOT UNKNOWN N/A Returns TRUE if boolean is TRUE or FALSE; returns FALSE if boolean is UNKNOWN.

Arithmetic Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
  • numeric
+ NUMERIC Returns NUMERIC.
  • numeric
- numeric Returns negative Numeric
numeric1 + numeric2 NUMERIC1 + NUMERIC2 Returns NUMERIC1 plus NUMERIC2.
numeric1 - numeric2 NUMERIC1 - NUMERIC2 Return NUMERIC1 minus NUMERIC2
numeric1 * numberic2 NUMERIC1 * NUMERIC2 Returns NUMERIC1 multiplied by NUMERIC2
numeric1 / numeric2 NUMERIC1 / NUMERIC2 Returns NUMERIC1 divided by NUMERIC2
numeric1 % numeric2 MOD(numeric1, numeric2) Returns the remainder (modulus) of numeric1 divided by numeric2. The result is negative only if numeric1 is negative.
POWER(numeric1, numeric2) NUMERIC1.power(NUMERIC2) NUMERIC1.power(NUMERIC2)
ABS(numeric) numeric.abs() Returns the absolute value of numeric.
SQRT(numeric) NUMERIC.sqrt() Returns the square root of NUMERIC.
LN(numeric) NUMERIC.ln() Returns the natural logarithm (base e) of NUMERIC.
LOG10(numeric) numeric.log10() Returns the base 10 logarithm of numeric.
LOG2(numeric) numeric.log2() Returns the base 2 logarithm of numeric.
LOG(numeric2) LOG(numeric1, numeric2) NUMERIC1.log() NUMERIC1.log(NUMERIC2) When called with one argument, returns the natural logarithm of numeric2. When called with two arguments, this function returns the logarithm of numeric2 to the base numeric1. Currently, numeric2 must be greater than 0 and numeric1 must be greater than 1.
EXP(numeric) NUMERIC.exp() Returns e raised to the power of numeric.
CEIL(numeric) CEILING(numeric) NUMERIC.ceil() NUMERIC.ceiling() Rounds numeric up, and returns the smallest number that is greater than or equal to numeric.
FLOOR(numeric) NUMERIC.floor() Rounds numeric down, and returns the largest number that is less than or equal to numeric.
SIN(numeric) NUMERIC.sin() Returns the sine of numeric.
SINH(numeric) NUMERIC.sinh() Returns the hyperbolic sine of numeric. The return type is DOUBLE.
COS(numeric) NUMERIC.cos() Returns the cosine of numeric.
TAN(numeric) NUMERIC.tan() Returns the tangent of numeric.
TANH(numeric) NUMERIC.tanh() Returns the hyperbolic tangent of numeric. The return type is DOUBLE.
COT(numeric) NUMERIC.cot() Returns the cotangent of a numeric.
ASIN(numeric) NUMERIC.asin() Returns the arc sine of numeric.
ACOS(numeric) NUMERIC.acos() Returns the arc cosine of numeric.
ATAN(numeric) NUMERIC.atan() Returns the arc tangent of numeric.
ATAN2(numeric1, numeric2) atan2(NUMERIC1, NUMERIC2) Returns the arc tangent of a coordinate (NUMERIC1, NUMERIC2).
COSH(numeric) NUMERIC.cosh() Returns the hyperbolic cosine of NUMERIC. Return value type is DOUBLE.
DEGREES(numeric) NUMERIC.degrees() Returns the degree representation of a radian NUMERIC.
RADIANS(numeric) NUMERIC.radians() Returns the radian representation of a degree NUMERIC.
SIGN(numeric) NUMERIC.sign() Returns the signum of NUMERIC.
ROUND(NUMERIC, INT) NUMERIC.round(INT) Returns a number rounded to INT decimal places for NUMERIC.
PI() pi() Returns a value that is closer than any other values to pi.
E() e() Returns a value that is closer than any other values to e.
RAND() rand() Returns a pseudorandom double value in the range [0.0, 1.0)
RAND(INT) rand(INT) Returns a pseudorandom double value in the range [0.0, 1.0) with an initial seed integer. Two RAND functions will return identical sequences of numbers if they have the same initial seed.
RAND_INTEGER(INT) randInteger(INT) Returns a pseudorandom integer value in the range [0, INT)
RAND_INTEGER(INT1, INT2) randInteger(INT1, INT2) Returns a pseudorandom integer value in the range [0, INT2) with an initial seed INT1. Two RAND_INTGER functions will return idential sequences of numbers if they have the same initial seed and bound.
UUID() uuid() Returns an UUID (Universally Unique Identifier) string (e.g., “3d3c68f7-f608-473f-b60c-b0c44ad4cc4e”) according to RFC 4122 type 4 (pseudo randomly generated) UUID. The UUID is generated using a cryptographically strong pseudo random number generator.
BIN(INT) INT.bin() Returns a string representation of INTEGER in binary format. Returns NULL if INTEGER is NULL. E.g., 4.bin() returns “100” and 12.bin() returns “1100”.
HEX(numeric) HEX(string) NUMERIC.hex() STRING.hex() Returns a string representation of an integer NUMERIC value or a STRING in hex format. Returns NULL if the argument is NULL. E.g. a numeric 20 leads to “14”, a numeric 100 leads to “64”, a string “hello,world” leads to “68656C6C6F2C776F726C64”.
TRUNCATE(numeric1, integer2) NUMERIC1.truncate(INTEGER2) Returns a numeric of truncated to integer2 decimal places. Returns NULL if numeric1 or integer2 is NULL. If integer2 is 0, the result has no decimal point or fractional part. integer2 can be negative to cause integer2 digits left of the decimal point of the value to become zero. This function can also pass in only one numeric1 parameter and not set integer2 to use. If integer2 is not set, the function truncates as if integer2 were 0. E.g. 42.324.truncate(2) to 42.32. and 42.324.truncate() to 42.0.

String Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
string1 || string2 STRING1 + STRING2 Returns the concatenation of STRING1 and STRING2.
CHAR_LENGTH(string) CHARACTER_LENGTH(string) STRING.charLength() Returns the number of characters in STRING.
UPPER(string) STRING.upperCase() Returns STRING in uppercase.
LOWER(string) STRING.lowerCase() Returns string in lowercase.
POSITION(string1 IN string2) STRING1.position(STRING2) Returns the position (start from 1) of the first occurrence of STRING1 in STRING2; returns 0 if STRING1 cannot be found in STRING2.
TRIM([ BOTH | LEADING | TRAILING ] string1 FROM string2) STRING1.trim(LEADING, STRING2) STRING1.trim(TRAILING, STRING2) STRING1.trim(BOTH, STRING2) STRING1.trim(BOTH) STRING1.trim() Returns a string that removes leading and/or trailing characters STRING2 from STRING1. By default, whitespaces at both sides are removed.
LTRIM(string) STRING.ltrim() Returns a string that removes the left whitespaces from STRING. E.g., ’ This is a test String.’.ltrim() returns “This is a test String.”.
RTRIM(string) STRING.rtrim() Returns a string that removes the right whitespaces from STRING. E.g., ‘This is a test String. ‘.rtrim() returns “This is a test String.”.
REPEAT(string, int) STRING.repeat(INT) Returns a string that repeats the base string integer times. E.g., REPEAT(‘This is a test String.’, 2) returns “This is a test String.This is a test String.”.
REGEXP_REPLACE(string1, string2, string3) STRING1.regexpReplace(STRING2, STRING3) Returns a string from STRING1 with all the substrings that match a regular expression STRING2 consecutively being replaced with STRING3. E.g., ‘foobar’.regexpReplace(‘oo|ar’, ‘’) returns “fb”.
OVERLAY(string1 PLACING string2 FROM integer1 [ FOR integer2 ]) STRING1.overlay(STRING2, INT1) STRING1.overlay(STRING2, INT1, INT2) Returns a string that replaces INT2 (STRING2’s length by default) characters of STRING1 with STRING2 from position INT1. E.g., ‘xxxxxtest’.overlay(‘xxxx’, 6) returns “xxxxxxxxx”; ‘xxxxxtest’.overlay(‘xxxx’, 6, 2) returns “xxxxxxxxxst”.
SUBSTRING(string FROM integer1 [ FOR integer2 ]) STRING.substring(INT1) STRING.substring(INT1, INT2) Returns a substring of STRING starting from position INT1 with length INT2 (to the end by default).
REPLACE(string1, string2, string3) STRING1.replace(STRING2, STRING3) Returns a new string which replaces all the occurrences of STRING2 with STRING3 (non-overlapping) from STRING1. E.g., ‘hello world’.replace(‘world’, ‘flink’) returns ‘hello flink’; ‘ababab’.replace(‘abab’, ‘z’) returns ‘zab’.
REGEXP_EXTRACT(string1, string2[, integer]) STRING1.regexpExtract(STRING2[, INTEGER1])

Returns a string from string1 which extracted with a specified regular expression string2 and a regex match group index integer.

The regex match group index starts from 1 and 0 means matching the whole regex. In addition, the regex match group index should not exceed the number of the defined groups.

E.g. REGEXP_EXTRACT(‘foothebar’, ‘foo(.*?)(bar)’, 2)" returns “bar”.

INITCAP(string) STRING.initCap() Returns a new form of STRING with the first character of each word converted to uppercase and the rest characters to lowercase. Here a word means a sequences of alphanumeric characters.
CONCAT(string1, string2,…) concat(STRING1, STRING2, ...) Returns a string that concatenates string1, string2, …. Returns NULL if any argument is NULL. E.g., CONCAT(‘AA’, ‘BB’, ‘CC’) returns “AABBCC”.
CONCAT_WS(string1, string2, string3,…) concat_ws(STRING1, STRING2, STRING3, ...) Returns a string that concatenates STRING2, STRING3, … with a separator STRING1. The separator is added between the strings to be concatenated. Returns NULL If STRING1 is NULL. Compared with concat(), concat_ws() automatically skips NULL arguments. E.g., concat_ws(’~’, ‘AA’, Null(STRING), ‘BB’, ‘’, ‘CC’) returns “AA~BB~~CC”.
LPAD(string1, integer, string2) STRING1.lpad(INT, STRING2) Returns a new string from string1 left-padded with string2 to a length of integer characters. If the length of string1 is shorter than integer, returns string1 shortened to integer characters. E.g., LPAD(‘hi’, 4, ‘??’) returns “??hi”; LPAD(‘hi’, 1, ‘??’) returns “h”.
RPAD(string1, integer, string2) STRING1.rpad(INT, STRING2) Returns a new string from string1 right-padded with string2 to a length of integer characters. If the length of string1 is shorter than integer, returns string1 shortened to integer characters. E.g., RPAD(‘hi’, 4, ‘??’) returns “hi??”, RPAD(‘hi’, 1, ‘??’) returns “h”.
FROM_BASE64(string) STRING.fromBase64() Returns the base64-decoded result from string; returns NULL if string is NULL. E.g., FROM_BASE64(‘aGVsbG8gd29ybGQ=’) returns “hello world”.
TO_BASE64(string) STRING.toBase64() Returns the base64-encoded result from string; returns NULL if string is NULL. E.g., TO_BASE64(‘hello world’) returns “aGVsbG8gd29ybGQ=”.
ASCII(string) STRING.ascii() Returns the numeric value of the first character of string. Returns NULL if string is NULL. E.g., ascii(‘abc’) returns 97, and ascii(CAST(NULL AS VARCHAR)) returns NULL.
CHR(integer) INT.chr() Returns the ASCII character having the binary equivalent to integer. If integer is larger than 255, we will get the modulus of integer divided by 255 first, and returns CHR of the modulus. Returns NULL if integer is NULL. E.g., chr(97) returns a, chr(353) returns a, and ascii(CAST(NULL AS VARCHAR)) returns NULL.
DECODE(binary, string) BINARY.decode(STRING) Decodes the first argument into a String using the provided character set (one of ‘US-ASCII’, ‘ISO-8859-1’, ‘UTF-8’, ‘UTF-16BE’, ‘UTF-16LE’, ‘UTF-16’). If either argument is null, the result will also be null.
ENCODE(string1, string2) STRING1.encode(STRING2) Encodes the string1 into a BINARY using the provided string2 character set (one of ‘US-ASCII’, ‘ISO-8859-1’, ‘UTF-8’, ‘UTF-16BE’, ‘UTF-16LE’, ‘UTF-16’). If either argument is null, the result will also be null.
INSTR(string1, string2) STRING1.instr(STRING2) Returns the position of the first occurrence of string2 in string1. Returns NULL if any of arguments is NULL.
LEFT(string, integer) STRING.LEFT(INT) Returns the leftmost integer characters from the string. Returns EMPTY String if integer is negative. Returns NULL if any argument is NULL.
RIGHT(string, integer) STRING.RIGHT(INT) Returns the rightmost integer characters from the string. Returns EMPTY String if integer is negative. Returns NULL if any argument is NULL.
LOCATE(string1, string2[, integer]) STRING1.locate(STRING2[, INTEGER]) Returns the position of the first occurrence of string1 in string2 after position integer. Returns 0 if not found. Returns NULL if any of arguments is NULL.
PARSE_URL(string1, string2[, string3]) STRING1.parseUrl(STRING2[, STRING3])

Returns the specified part from the URL. Valid values for string2 include ‘HOST’, ‘PATH’, ‘QUERY’, ‘REF’, ‘PROTOCOL’, ‘AUTHORITY’, ‘FILE’, and ‘USERINFO’. Returns NULL if any of arguments is NULL.

E.g., parse_url(‘http://facebook.com/path1/p.php?k1=v1&k2=v2#Ref1', ‘HOST’), returns ‘facebook.com’.

Also a value of a particular key in QUERY can be extracted by providing the key as the third argument string3.

E.g., parse_url(‘http://facebook.com/path1/p.php?k1=v1&k2=v2#Ref1', ‘QUERY’, ‘k1’) returns ‘v1’.

REGEXP(string1, string2) STRING1.regexp(STRING2) Returns TRUE if any (possibly empty) substring of string1 matches the Java regular expression string2, otherwise FALSE. Returns NULL if any of arguments is NULL.
REVERSE(string) STRING.reverse() Returns the reversed string. Returns NULL if string is NULL.
SPLIT_INDEX(string1, string2, integer1) STRING1.splitIndex(STRING2, INTEGER1) Splits string1 by the delimiter string2, returns the integerth (zero-based) string of the split strings. Returns NULL if integer is negative. Returns NULL if any of arguments is NULL.
STR_TO_MAP(string1[, string2, string3]) STRING1.strToMap([STRING2, STRING3]) Returns a map after splitting the string1 into key/value pairs using delimiters. string2 is the pair delimiter, default is ‘,’. And string3 is the key-value delimiter, default is ‘=’. Both pair delimiter and key-value delimiter are treated as regular expressions. So special characters (e.g. <([{\^-=$!|]})?*+.>) need to be properly escaped before using as a delimiter literally.
SUBSTR(string, integer1[, integer2]) STRING.substr(INTEGER1[, INTEGER2]) Returns a substring of string starting from position integer1 with length integer2 (to the end by default).

Temporal Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
DATE string STRING.toDate() Returns a SQL date parsed from string in form of “yyyy-MM-dd”.
TIME string STRING.toTime() Returns a SQL time parsed from string in form of “HH:mm:ss”.
TIMESTAMP string STRING.toTimestamp() Returns a SQL timestamp parsed from string in form of “yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss[.SSS]”.
INTERVAL string range N/A

Parses an interval string in the form “dd hh:mm:ss.fff” for SQL intervals of milliseconds or “yyyy-mm” for SQL intervals of months. An interval range might be DAY, MINUTE, DAY TO HOUR, or DAY TO SECOND for intervals of milliseconds; YEAR or YEAR TO MONTH for intervals of months.

E.g., INTERVAL ‘10 00:00:00.004’ DAY TO SECOND, INTERVAL ‘10’ DAY, or INTERVAL ‘2-10’ YEAR TO MONTH return intervals.

N/A NUMERIC.year NUMERIC.years Creates an interval of months for NUMERIC years.
N/A NUMERIC.quarter NUMERIC.quarters Creates an interval of months for NUMERIC quarters. E.g., 2.quarters returns 6.
N/A NUMERIC.month NUMERIC.months Creates an interval of NUMERIC months.
N/A NUMERIC.week NUMERIC.weeks Creates an interval of milliseconds for NUMERIC weeks. E.g., 2.weeks returns 1209600000.
N/A NUMERIC.day NUMERIC.days Creates an interval of milliseconds for NUMERIC days.
N/A NUMERIC.hour NUMERIC.hours Creates an interval of milliseconds for NUMERIC hours.
N/A NUMERIC.minute NUMERIC.minutes Creates an interval of milliseconds for NUMERIC minutes.
N/A NUMERIC.second NUMERIC.seconds Creates an interval of milliseconds for NUMERIC seconds.
N/A NUMERIC.milli NUMERIC.millis Creates an interval of NUMERIC milliseconds.
LOCALTIME localTime() Returns the current SQL time in the local time zone, the return type is TIME(0). It is evaluated for each record in streaming mode. But in batch mode, it is evaluated once as the query starts and uses the same result for every row.
LOCALTIMESTAMP localTimestamp() Returns the current SQL timestamp in local time zone, the return type is TIMESTAMP(3). It is evaluated for each record in streaming mode. But in batch mode, it is evaluated once as the query starts and uses the same result for every row.
CURRENT_TIME currentTime() Returns the current SQL time in the local time zone, this is a synonym of LOCAL_TIME.
CURRENT_DATE currentDate() Returns the current SQL date in the local time zone. It is evaluated for each record in streaming mode. But in batch mode, it is evaluated once as the query starts and uses the same result for every row.
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP currentTimestamp() Returns the current SQL timestamp in the local time zone, the return type is TIMESTAMP_LTZ(3). It is evaluated for each record in streaming mode. But in batch mode, it is evaluated once as the query starts and uses the same result for every row.
NOW() N/A Returns the current SQL timestamp in the local time zone, this is a synonym of CURRENT_TIMESTAMP.
CURRENT_ROW_TIMESTAMP() N/A Returns the current SQL timestamp in the local time zone, the return type is TIMESTAMP_LTZ(3). It is evaluated for each record no matter in batch or streaming mode.
EXTRACT(timeinteravlunit FROM temporal) TEMPORAL.extract(TIMEINTERVALUNIT) Returns a long value extracted from the timeintervalunit part of temporal. E.g., EXTRACT(DAY FROM DATE ‘2006-06-05’) returns 5.
YEAR(date) N/A Returns the year from SQL date. Equivalent to EXTRACT(YEAR FROM date). E.g., YEAR(DATE ‘1994-09-27’) returns 1994.
QUARTER(date) N/A Returns the quarter of a year (an integer between 1 and 4) from SQL date. Equivalent to EXTRACT(QUARTER FROM date). E.g., QUARTER(DATE ‘1994-09-27’) returns 3.
MONTH(date) N/A Returns the month of a year (an integer between 1 and 12) from SQL date. Equivalent to EXTRACT(MONTH FROM date). E.g., MONTH(DATE ‘1994-09-27’) returns 9.
WEEK(date) N/A Returns the week of a year (an integer between 1 and 53) from SQL date. Equivalent to EXTRACT(WEEK FROM date). E.g., WEEK(DATE ‘1994-09-27’) returns 39.
DAYOFYEAR(date) N/A Returns the day of a year (an integer between 1 and 366) from SQL date. Equivalent to EXTRACT(DOY FROM date). E.g., DAYOFYEAR(DATE ‘1994-09-27’) returns 270.
DAYOFMONTH(date) N/A Returns the day of a month (an integer between 1 and 31) from SQL date. Equivalent to EXTRACT(DAY FROM date). E.g., DAYOFMONTH(DATE ‘1994-09-27’) returns 27.
DAYOFWEEK(date) N/A Returns the day of a week (an integer between 1 and 7) from SQL date. Equivalent to EXTRACT(DOW FROM date). E.g., DAYOFWEEK(DATE ‘1994-09-27’) returns 3.
HOUR(timestamp) N/A Returns the hour of a day (an integer between 0 and 23) from SQL timestamp timestamp. Equivalent to EXTRACT(HOUR FROM timestamp). E.g., MINUTE(TIMESTAMP ‘1994-09-27 13:14:15’) returns 14.
MINUTE(timestamp) N/A Returns the minute of an hour (an integer between 0 and 59) from SQL timestamp timestamp. Equivalent to EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM timestamp). E.g., MINUTE(TIMESTAMP ‘1994-09-27 13:14:15’) returns 14.
SECOND(timestamp) N/A Returns the second of a minute (an integer between 0 and 59) from SQL timestamp. Equivalent to EXTRACT(SECOND FROM timestamp). E.g., SECOND(TIMESTAMP ‘1994-09-27 13:14:15’) returns 15.
FLOOR(timepoint TO timeintervalunit) TIMEPOINT.floor(TIMEINTERVALUNIT) Returns a value that rounds timepoint down to the time unit timeintervalunit. E.g., FLOOR(TIME ‘12:44:31’ TO MINUTE) returns 12:44:00.
CEIL(timepoint TO timeintervaluntit) TIMEPOINT.ceil(TIMEINTERVALUNIT) Returns a value that rounds timepoint up to the time unit timeintervalunit. E.g., CEIL(TIME ‘12:44:31’ TO MINUTE) returns 12:45:00.
(timepoint1, temporal1) OVERLAPS (timepoint2, temporal2) temporalOverlaps(TIMEPOINT1, TEMPORAL1, TIMEPOINT2, TEMPORAL2) Returns TRUE if two time intervals defined by (timepoint1, temporal1) and (timepoint2, temporal2) overlap. The temporal values could be either a time point or a time interval. E.g., (TIME ‘2:55:00’, INTERVAL ‘1’ HOUR) OVERLAPS (TIME ‘3:30:00’, INTERVAL ‘2’ HOUR) returns TRUE; (TIME ‘9:00:00’, TIME ‘10:00:00’) OVERLAPS (TIME ‘10:15:00’, INTERVAL ‘3’ HOUR) returns FALSE.
DATE_FORMAT(timestamp, string) dateFormat(TIMESTAMP, STRING) Converts timestamp to a value of string in the format specified by the date format string. The format string is compatible with Java’s SimpleDateFormat.
TIMESTAMPADD(timeintervalunit, interval, timepoint) N/A
TIMESTAMPDIFF(timepointunit, timepoint1, timepoint2) timestampDiff(TIMEPOINTUNIT, TIMEPOINT1, TIMEPOINT2) Returns the (signed) number of timepointunit between timepoint1 and timepoint2. The unit for the interval is given by the first argument, which should be one of the following values: SECOND, MINUTE, HOUR, DAY, MONTH, or YEAR.
CONVERT_TZ(string1, string2, string3) convertTz(STRING1, STRING2, STRING3) Converts a datetime string1 (with default ISO timestamp format ‘yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss’) from time zone string2 to time zone string3. The format of time zone should be either an abbreviation such as “PST”, a full name such as “America/Los_Angeles”, or a custom ID such as “GMT-08:00”. E.g., CONVERT_TZ(‘1970-01-01 00:00:00’, ‘UTC’, ‘America/Los_Angeles’) returns ‘1969-12-31 16:00:00’.
FROM_UNIXTIME(numeric[, string]) fromUnixtime(NUMERIC[, STRING]) Returns a representation of the numeric argument as a value in string format (default is ‘yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss’). numeric is an internal timestamp value representing seconds since ‘1970-01-01 00:00:00’ UTC, such as produced by the UNIX_TIMESTAMP() function. The return value is expressed in the session time zone (specified in TableConfig). E.g., FROM_UNIXTIME(44) returns ‘1970-01-01 00:00:44’ if in UTC time zone, but returns ‘1970-01-01 09:00:44’ if in ‘Asia/Tokyo’ time zone.
UNIX_TIMESTAMP() unixTimestamp() Gets current Unix timestamp in seconds. This function is not deterministic which means the value would be recalculated for each record.
UNIX_TIMESTAMP(string1[, string2]) unixTimestamp(STRING1[, STRING2])

Converts a date time string string1 with format string2 (by default: yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss if not specified) to Unix timestamp (in seconds), using the specified timezone in table config.

If a time zone is specified in the date time string and parsed by UTC+X format such as “yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS X”, this function will use the specified timezone in the date time string instead of the timezone in table config. If the date time string can not be parsed, the default value Long.MIN_VALUE(-9223372036854775808) will be returned.

Flink SQL> SET 'table.local-time-zone' = 'Europe/Berlin';

-- Returns 25201
Flink SQL> SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('1970-01-01 08:00:01.001', 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS');
-- Returns 1
Flink SQL> SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('1970-01-01 08:00:01.001 +0800', 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS X');
-- Returns 25201
Flink SQL> SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('1970-01-01 08:00:01.001 +0800', 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS');
-- Returns -9223372036854775808
Flink SQL> SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('1970-01-01 08:00:01.001', 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS X');
TO_DATE(string1[, string2]) toDate(STRING1[, STRING2]) Converts a date string string1 with format string2 (by default ‘yyyy-MM-dd’) to a date.
TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ(numeric, precision) toTimestampLtz(NUMERIC, PRECISION) Converts a epoch seconds or epoch milliseconds to a TIMESTAMP_LTZ, the valid precision is 0 or 3, the 0 represents TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ(epochSeconds, 0), the 3 represents TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ(epochMilliseconds, 3).
TO_TIMESTAMP(string1[, string2]) toTimestamp(STRING1[, STRING2]) Converts date time string string1 with format string2 (by default: ‘yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss’) to a timestamp, without time zone.
CURRENT_WATERMARK(rowtime) N/A

Returns the current watermark for the given rowtime attribute, or NULL if no common watermark of all upstream operations is available at the current operation in the pipeline. The return type of the function is inferred to match that of the provided rowtime attribute, but with an adjusted precision of 3. For example, if the rowtime attribute is TIMESTAMP_LTZ(9), the function will return TIMESTAMP_LTZ(3).

Note that this function can return NULL, and you may have to consider this case. For example, if you want to filter out late data you can use:

WHERE
  CURRENT_WATERMARK(ts) IS NULL
  OR ts > CURRENT_WATERMARK(ts)

Conditional Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
CASE value WHEN value1_1 [, value1_2]* THEN RESULT1 (WHEN value2_1 [, value2_2 ]* THEN result_2)* (ELSE result_z) END N/A Returns resultX when the first time value is contained in (valueX_1, valueX_2, …). When no value matches, returns result_z if it is provided and returns NULL otherwise.
CASE WHEN condition1 THEN result1 (WHEN condition2 THEN result2)* (ELSE result_z) END N/A Returns resultX when the first conditionX is met. When no condition is met, returns result_z if it is provided and returns NULL otherwise.
NULLIF(value1, value2) N/A Returns NULL if value1 is equal to value2; returns value1 otherwise. E.g., NULLIF(5, 5) returns NULL; NULLIF(5, 0) returns 5.
COALESCE(value1 [, value2]*) coalesce(value1, [, value2]*)

Returns the first argument that is not NULL.

If all arguments are NULL, it returns NULL as well. The return type is the least restrictive, common type of all of its arguments. The return type is nullable if all arguments are nullable as well.

-- Returns 'default'
COALESCE(NULL, 'default')

-- Returns the first non-null value among f0 and f1,
-- or 'default' if f0 and f1 are both NULL
COALESCE(f0, f1, 'default')
IF(condition, true_value, false_value) N/A Returns the true_value if condition is met, otherwise false_value. E.g., IF(5 > 3, 5, 3) returns 5.
IFNULL(input, null_replacement) input.ifNull(nullReplacement)

Returns null_replacement if input is NULL; otherwise input is returned.

Compared to COALESCE or CASE WHEN, this function returns a data type that is very specific in terms of nullability. The returned type is the common type of both arguments but only nullable if the null_replacement is nullable.

The function allows to pass nullable columns into a function or table that is declared with a NOT NULL constraint.

E.g., IFNULL(nullable_column, 5) returns never NULL.

IS_ALPHA(string) N/A Returns true if all characters in string are letter, otherwise false.
IS_DECIMAL(string) N/A Returns true if string can be parsed to a valid numeric, otherwise false.
IS_DIGIT(string) N/A Returns true if all characters in string are digit, otherwise false.
N/A BOOLEAN.?(VALUE1, VALUE2) Returns VALUE1 if BOOLEAN evaluates to TRUE; returns VALUE2 otherwise. E.g., (42 > 5).?(‘A’, ‘B’) returns “A”.
GREATEST(value1[, value2]*) N/A Returns the greatest value of the list of arguments. Returns NULL if any argument is NULL.
LEAST(value1[, value2]*) N/A Returns the least value of the list of arguments. Returns NULL if any argument is NULL.

Type Conversion Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
CAST(value AS type) ANY.cast(TYPE) Returns a new value being cast to type type. A CAST error throws an exception and fails the job. When performing a cast operation that may fail, like STRING to INT, one should rather use TRY_CAST, in order to handle errors. If “table.exec.legacy-cast-behaviour” is enabled, CAST behaves like TRY_CAST. E.g., CAST(‘42’ AS INT) returns 42; CAST(NULL AS STRING) returns NULL of type STRING; CAST(’non-number’ AS INT) throws an exception and fails the job.
TRY_CAST(value AS type) ANY.tryCast(TYPE) Like CAST, but in case of error, returns NULL rather than failing the job. E.g., TRY_CAST(‘42’ AS INT) returns 42; TRY_CAST(NULL AS STRING) returns NULL of type STRING; TRY_CAST(’non-number’ AS INT) returns NULL of type INT; COALESCE(TRY_CAST(’non-number’ AS INT), 0) returns 0 of type INT.
TYPEOF(input) TYPEOF(input, force_serializable) call("TYPEOF", input) call("TYPEOF", input, force_serializable) Returns the string representation of the input expression’s data type. By default, the returned string is a summary string that might omit certain details for readability. If force_serializable is set to TRUE, the string represents a full data type that could be persisted in a catalog. Note that especially anonymous, inline data types have no serializable string representation. In this case, NULL is returned.

Collection Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
CARDINALITY(array) ARRAY.cardinality() Returns the number of elements in array.
array ‘[’ INT ‘]’ ARRAY.at(INT) Returns the element at position INT in array. The index starts from 1.
ELEMENT(array) ARRAY.element() Returns the sole element of array (whose cardinality should be one); returns NULL if array is empty. Throws an exception if array has more than one element.
CARDINALITY(map) MAP.cardinality() Returns the number of entries in map.
map ‘[’ value ‘]’ MAP.at(ANY) Returns the value specified by key value in map.
ARRAY_CONTAINS(haystack, needle) haystack.arrayContains(needle) Returns whether the given element exists in an array. Checking for null elements in the array is supported. If the array itself is null, the function will return null. The given element is cast implicitly to the array’s element type if necessary.
ARRAY_DISTINCT(haystack) haystack.arrayDistinct() Returns an array with unique elements. If the array itself is null, the function will return null. Keeps ordering of elements.
ARRAY_POSITION(haystack, needle) haystack.arrayPosition(needle) Returns the position of the first occurrence of element in the given array as int. Returns 0 if the given value could not be found in the array. Returns null if either of the arguments are null. And this is not zero based, but 1-based index. The first element in the array has index 1.
ARRAY_REMOVE(haystack, needle) haystack.arrayRemove(needle) Removes all elements that equal to element from array. If the array itself is null, the function will return null. Keeps ordering of elements.
ARRAY_REVERSE(haystack) haystack.arrayReverse() Returns an array in reverse order. If the array itself is null, the function will return null.
ARRAY_SLICE(array, start_offset[, end_offset]) array.arraySlice(start_offset[, end_offset]) Returns a subarray of the input array between ‘start_offset’ and ’end_offset’ inclusive. The offsets are 1-based however 0 is also treated as the beginning of the array. Positive values are counted from the beginning of the array while negative from the end. If ’end_offset’ is omitted then this offset is treated as the length of the array. If ‘start_offset’ is after ’end_offset’ or both are out of array bounds an empty array will be returned. Returns null if any input is null.
ARRAY_UNION(array1, array2) haystack.arrayUnion(array) Returns an array of the elements in the union of array1 and array2, without duplicates. If any of the array is null, the function will return null.
ARRAY_CONCAT(array1, …) array1.arrayConcat(...) Returns an array that is the result of concatenating at least one array. This array contains all the elements in the first array, followed by all the elements in the second array, and so forth, up to the Nth array. If any input array is NULL, the function returns NULL.
ARRAY_MAX(array) array.arrayMax() Returns the maximum value from the array, if array itself is null, the function returns null.
ARRAY_JOIN(array, delimiter[, nullReplacement]) array.arrayJoin(delimiter[, nullReplacement]) Returns a string that represents the concatenation of the elements in the given array and the elements’ data type in the given array is string. The delimiter is a string that separates each pair of consecutive elements of the array. The optional nullReplacement is a string that replaces null elements in the array. If nullReplacement is not specified, null elements in the array will be omitted from the resulting string. Returns null if input array or delimiter or nullReplacement are null.
ARRAY_MIN(array) array.arrayMin() Returns the minimum value from the array, if array itself is null, the function returns null.
MAP_KEYS(map) MAP.mapKeys() Returns the keys of the map as array. No order guaranteed.
MAP_VALUES(map) MAP.mapValues() Returns the values of the map as array. No order guaranteed.
MAP_ENTRIES(map) MAP.mapEntries() Returns an array of all entries in the given map. No order guaranteed.
MAP_FROM_ARRAYS(array_of_keys, array_of_values) mapFromArrays(array_of_keys, array_of_values) Returns a map created from an arrays of keys and values. Note that the lengths of two arrays should be the same.

JSON Functions #

JSON functions make use of JSON path expressions as described in ISO/IEC TR 19075-6 of the SQL standard. Their syntax is inspired by and adopts many features of ECMAScript, but is neither a subset nor superset thereof.

Path expressions come in two flavors, lax and strict. When omitted, it defaults to the strict mode. Strict mode is intended to examine data from a schema perspective and will throw errors whenever data does not adhere to the path expression. However, functions like JSON_VALUE allow defining fallback behavior if an error is encountered. Lax mode, on the other hand, is more forgiving and converts errors to empty sequences.

The special character $ denotes the root node in a JSON path. Paths can access properties ($.a), array elements ($.a[0].b), or branch over all elements in an array ($.a[*].b).

Known Limitations:

  • Not all features of Lax mode are currently supported correctly. This is an upstream bug (CALCITE-4717). Non-standard behavior is not guaranteed.
SQL Function Table Function Description
IS JSON [ { VALUE | SCALAR | ARRAY | OBJECT } ] STRING.isJson([JsonType type])

Determine whether a given string is valid JSON.

Specifying the optional type argument puts a constraint on which type of JSON object is allowed. If the string is valid JSON, but not that type, false is returned. The default is VALUE.

-- TRUE
'1' IS JSON
'[]' IS JSON
'{}' IS JSON

-- TRUE
'"abc"' IS JSON
-- FALSE
'abc' IS JSON
NULL IS JSON

-- TRUE
'1' IS JSON SCALAR
-- FALSE
'1' IS JSON ARRAY
-- FALSE
'1' IS JSON OBJECT

-- FALSE
'{}' IS JSON SCALAR
-- FALSE
'{}' IS JSON ARRAY
-- TRUE
'{}' IS JSON OBJECT
JSON_EXISTS(jsonValue, path [ { TRUE | FALSE | UNKNOWN | ERROR } ON ERROR ]) STRING.jsonExists(STRING path [, JsonExistsOnError onError])

Determines whether a JSON string satisfies a given path search criterion.

If the error behavior is omitted, FALSE ON ERROR is assumed as the default.

-- TRUE
SELECT JSON_EXISTS('{"a": true}', '$.a');
-- FALSE
SELECT JSON_EXISTS('{"a": true}', '$.b');
-- TRUE
SELECT JSON_EXISTS('{"a": [{ "b": 1 }]}',
  '$.a[0].b');

-- TRUE
SELECT JSON_EXISTS('{"a": true}',
  'strict $.b' TRUE ON ERROR);
-- FALSE
SELECT JSON_EXISTS('{"a": true}',
  'strict $.b' FALSE ON ERROR);
JSON_STRING(value) jsonString(value)

Serializes a value into JSON.

This function returns a JSON string containing the serialized value. If the value is NULL, the function returns NULL.

-- NULL
JSON_STRING(CAST(NULL AS INT))

-- '1'
JSON_STRING(1)
-- 'true'
JSON_STRING(TRUE)
-- '"Hello, World!"'
JSON_STRING('Hello, World!')
-- '[1,2]'
JSON_STRING(ARRAY[1, 2])
JSON_VALUE(jsonValue, path [RETURNING ] [ { NULL | ERROR | DEFAULT } ON EMPTY ] [ { NULL | ERROR | DEFAULT } ON ERROR ]) STRING.jsonValue(STRING path [, returnType, onEmpty, defaultOnEmpty, onError, defaultOnError])

Extracts a scalar from a JSON string.

This method searches a JSON string for a given path expression and returns the value if the value at that path is scalar. Non-scalar values cannot be returned. By default, the value is returned as STRING. Using dataType a different type can be chosen, with the following types being supported:

  • VARCHAR / STRING
  • BOOLEAN
  • INTEGER
  • DOUBLE

For empty path expressions or errors a behavior can be defined to either return null, raise an error or return a defined default value instead. When omitted, the default is NULL ON EMPTY or NULL ON ERROR, respectively. The default value may be a literal or an expression. If the default value itself raises an error, it falls through to the error behavior for ON EMPTY, and raises an error for ON ERROR.

For path contains special characters such as spaces, you can use ['property'] or ["property"] to select the specified property in a parent object. Be sure to put single or double quotes around the property name. When using JSON_VALUE in SQL, the path is a character parameter which is already single quoted, so you have to escape the single quotes around property name, such as JSON_VALUE('{"a b": "true"}', '$.[''a b'']').

-- "true"
JSON_VALUE('{"a": true}', '$.a')

-- TRUE
JSON_VALUE('{"a": true}', '$.a' RETURNING BOOLEAN)

-- "false"
JSON_VALUE('{"a": true}', 'lax $.b'
    DEFAULT FALSE ON EMPTY)

-- "false"
JSON_VALUE('{"a": true}', 'strict $.b'
    DEFAULT FALSE ON ERROR)

-- 0.998D
JSON_VALUE('{"a.b": [0.998,0.996]}','$.["a.b"][0]' 
    RETURNING DOUBLE)

-- "right"
JSON_VALUE('{"contains blank": "right"}', 'strict $.[''contains blank'']' NULL ON EMPTY DEFAULT 'wrong' ON ERROR)
JSON_QUERY(jsonValue, path [ { WITHOUT | WITH CONDITIONAL | WITH UNCONDITIONAL } [ ARRAY ] WRAPPER ] [ { NULL | EMPTY ARRAY | EMPTY OBJECT | ERROR } ON EMPTY ] [ { NULL | EMPTY ARRAY | EMPTY OBJECT | ERROR } ON ERROR ]) STRING.jsonQuery(path [, JsonQueryWrapper [, JsonQueryOnEmptyOrError, JsonQueryOnEmptyOrError ] ])

Extracts JSON values from a JSON string.

The result is always returned as a STRING. The RETURNING clause is currently not supported.

The wrappingBehavior determines whether the extracted value should be wrapped into an array, and whether to do so unconditionally or only if the value itself isn’t an array already.

onEmpty and onError determine the behavior in case the path expression is empty, or in case an error was raised, respectively. By default, in both cases null is returned. Other choices are to use an empty array, an empty object, or to raise an error.

-- '{ "b": 1 }'
JSON_QUERY('{ "a": { "b": 1 } }', '$.a')
-- '[1, 2]'
JSON_QUERY('[1, 2]', '$')
-- NULL
JSON_QUERY(CAST(NULL AS STRING), '$')
-- '["c1","c2"]'
JSON_QUERY('{"a":[{"c":"c1"},{"c":"c2"}]}',
    'lax $.a[*].c')

-- Wrap result into an array
-- '[{}]'
JSON_QUERY('{}', '$' WITH CONDITIONAL ARRAY WRAPPER)
-- '[1, 2]'
JSON_QUERY('[1, 2]', '$' WITH CONDITIONAL ARRAY WRAPPER)
-- '[[1, 2]]'
JSON_QUERY('[1, 2]', '$' WITH UNCONDITIONAL ARRAY WRAPPER)

-- Scalars must be wrapped to be returned
-- NULL
JSON_QUERY(1, '$')
-- '[1]'
JSON_QUERY(1, '$' WITH CONDITIONAL ARRAY WRAPPER)

-- Behavior if path expression is empty / there is an error
-- '{}'
JSON_QUERY('{}', 'lax $.invalid' EMPTY OBJECT ON EMPTY)
-- '[]'
JSON_QUERY('{}', 'strict $.invalid' EMPTY ARRAY ON ERROR)
JSON_OBJECT([[KEY] key VALUE value]* [ { NULL | ABSENT } ON NULL ]) jsonObject(JsonOnNull, keyValues...)

Builds a JSON object string from a list of key-value pairs.

Note that keys must be non-NULL string literals, while values may be arbitrary expressions.

This function returns a JSON string. The ON NULL behavior defines how to treat NULL values. If omitted, NULL ON NULL is assumed by default.

Values which are created from another JSON construction function call (JSON_OBJECT, JSON_ARRAY) are inserted directly rather than as a string. This allows building nested JSON structures.

-- '{}'
JSON_OBJECT()

-- '{"K1":"V1","K2":"V2"}'
JSON_OBJECT('K1' VALUE 'V1', 'K2' VALUE 'V2')

-- Expressions as values
JSON_OBJECT('orderNo' VALUE orders.orderId)

-- ON NULL
JSON_OBJECT(KEY 'K1' VALUE CAST(NULL AS STRING) NULL ON NULL)   -- '{"K1":null}'
JSON_OBJECT(KEY 'K1' VALUE CAST(NULL AS STRING) ABSENT ON NULL) -- '{}'

-- '{"K1":{"K2":"V"}}'
JSON_OBJECT(
  KEY 'K1'
  VALUE JSON_OBJECT(
    KEY 'K2'
    VALUE 'V'
  )
)
JSON_ARRAY([value]* [ { NULL | ABSENT } ON NULL ]) jsonArray(JsonOnNull, values...)

Builds a JSON array string from a list of values.

This function returns a JSON string. The values can be arbitrary expressions. The ON NULL behavior defines how to treat NULL values. If omitted, ABSENT ON NULL is assumed by default.

Elements which are created from another JSON construction function call (JSON_OBJECT, JSON_ARRAY) are inserted directly rather than as a string. This allows building nested JSON structures.

-- '[]'
JSON_ARRAY()
-- '[1,"2"]'
JSON_ARRAY(1, '2')

-- Expressions as values
JSON_ARRAY(orders.orderId)

-- ON NULL
JSON_ARRAY(CAST(NULL AS STRING) NULL ON NULL) -- '[null]'
JSON_ARRAY(CAST(NULL AS STRING) ABSENT ON NULL) -- '[]'

-- '[[1]]'
JSON_ARRAY(JSON_ARRAY(1))

Value Construction Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description

implicit constructor with parenthesis

(value1 [, value2]*)

explicit ROW constructor with

ROW(value1 [, value2]*)

row(ANY1, ANY2, ...)

Returns a row created from a list of values (value1, value2,…).

The implicit row constructor requires at least two fields. The explicit row constructor can deal with an arbitrary number of fields. Both of them support arbitrary expressions as fields.

ARRAY ‘[’ value1 [, value2 ]* ‘]’ array(ANY1, ANY2, ...) Returns an array created from a list of values (value1, value2, …).
MAP ‘[’ value1, value2 [, value3, value4 ]* ‘]’ map(ANY1, ANY2, ANY3, ANY4, ...) Returns a map created from a list of key-value pairs ((value1, value2), (value3, value4), …).
N/A NUMERIC.rows Creates a NUMERIC interval of rows (commonly used in window creation).

Value Access Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
tableName.compositeType.field COMPOSITE.get(STRING) COMPOSITE.get(INT) Returns the value of a field from a Flink composite type (e.g., Tuple, POJO) by name.
tableName.compositeType.* ANY.flatten() Returns a flat representation of a Flink composite type (e.g., Tuple, POJO) that converts each of its direct subtype into a separate field. In most cases the fields of the flat representation are named similarly to the original fields but with a dollar separator (e.g., mypojo$mytuple$f0).

Grouping Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
GROUP_ID() N/A Returns an integer that uniquely identifies the combination of grouping keys.
GROUPING(expression1 [, expression2]* ) GROUPING_ID(expression1 [, expression2]* ) N/A Returns a bit vector of the given grouping expressions.

Hash Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description
MD5(string) STRING.md5() Returns the MD5 hash of string as a string of 32 hexadecimal digits; returns NULL if string is NULL.
SHA1(string) STRING.sha1() Returns the SHA-1 hash of string as a string of 40 hexadecimal digits; returns NULL if string is NULL.
SHA224(string) STRING.sha224() Returns the SHA-224 hash of string as a string of 56 hexadecimal digits; returns NULL if string is NULL.
SHA256(string) STRING.sha256() Returns the SHA-256 hash of string as a string of 64 hexadecimal digits; returns NULL if string is NULL.
SHA384(string) STRING.sha384() Returns the SHA-384 hash of string as a string of 96 hexadecimal digits; returns NULL if string is NULL.
SHA512(string) STRING.sha512() Returns the SHA-512 hash of string as a string of 128 hexadecimal digits; returns NULL if string is NULL.
SHA2(string, hashLength) STRING.sha2(INT) Returns the hash using the SHA-2 family of hash functions (SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384, or SHA-512). The first argument string is the string to be hashed and the second argument hashLength is the bit length of the result (224, 256, 384, or 512). Returns NULL if string or hashLength is NULL.

Auxiliary Functions #

SQL Function Table Function Description

Aggregate Functions #

The aggregate functions take an expression across all the rows as the input and return a single aggregated value as the result.

SQL Function Table Function Description
COUNT([ ALL ] expression | DISTINCT expression1 [, expression2]*) N/A By default or with ALL, returns the number of input rows for which expression is not NULL. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
COUNT(*) COUNT(1) FIELD.count Returns the number of input rows.
AVG([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.avg By default or with keyword ALL, returns the average (arithmetic mean) of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
SUM([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.sum By default or with keyword ALL, returns the sum of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
N/A FIELD.sum0 Returns the sum of numeric field FIELD across all input rows. If all values are NULL, returns 0.
MAX([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.max By default or with keyword ALL, returns the maximum value of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
MIN([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression ) FIELD.min By default or with keyword ALL, returns the minimum value of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
STDDEV_POP([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.stddevPop By default or with keyword ALL, returns the population standard deviation of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
STDDEV_SAMP([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.stddevSamp By default or with keyword ALL, returns the sample standard deviation of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
VAR_POP([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.varPop By default or with keyword ALL, returns the population variance (square of the population standard deviation) of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
VAR_SAMP([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.varSamp By default or with keyword ALL, returns the sample variance (square of the sample standard deviation) of expression across all input rows. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
COLLECT([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) FIELD.collect By default or with keyword ALL, returns a multiset of expression across all input rows. NULL values will be ignored. Use DISTINCT for one unique instance of each value.
VARIANCE([ ALL | DISTINCT ] expression) N/A Synonyms for VAR_SAMP().
RANK() N/A Returns the rank of a value in a group of values. The result is one plus the number of rows preceding or equal to the current row in the ordering of the partition. The values will produce gaps in the sequence.
DENSE_RANK() N/A Returns the rank of a value in a group of values. The result is one plus the previously assigned rank value. Unlike the function rank, dense_rank will not produce gaps in the ranking sequence.
ROW_NUMBER() N/A Assigns a unique, sequential number to each row, starting with one, according to the ordering of rows within the window partition. ROW_NUMBER and RANK are similar. ROW_NUMBER numbers all rows sequentially (for example 1, 2, 3, 4, 5). RANK provides the same numeric value for ties (for example 1, 2, 2, 4, 5).
LEAD(expression [, offset] [, default]) N/A Returns the value of expression at the offsetth row after the current row in the window. The default value of offset is 1 and the default value of default is NULL.
LAG(expression [, offset] [, default]) N/A Returns the value of expression at the offsetth row before the current row in the window. The default value of offset is 1 and the default value of default is NULL.
FIRST_VALUE(expression) FIELD.firstValue Returns the first value in an ordered set of values.
LAST_VALUE(expression) FIELD.lastValue Returns the last value in an ordered set of values.
LISTAGG(expression [, separator]) FIELD.listagg Concatenates the values of string expressions and places separator values between them. The separator is not added at the end of string. The default value of separator is ‘,’.
CUME_DIST() N/A Return the cumulative distribution of a value in a group of values. The result is the number of rows preceding or equal to the current row in the ordering of the partition divided by the number of rows in the window partition.
PERCENT_RANK() N/A Return the percentage ranking of a value in a group of values. The result is the rank value minus one, divided by the number of rows in the parition minus one. If the partition only contains one row, the function will return 0.
NTILE(n) N/A Divides the rows for each window partition into n buckets ranging from 1 to at most n. If the number of rows in the window partition doesn’t divide evenly into the number of buckets, then the remainder values are distributed one per bucket, starting with the first bucket. For example, with 6 rows and 4 buckets, the bucket values would be as follows: 1 1 2 2 3 4
JSON_OBJECTAGG([KEY] key VALUE value [ { NULL | ABSENT } ON NULL ]) jsonObjectAgg(JsonOnNull, keyExpression, valueExpression)

Builds a JSON object string by aggregating key-value expressions into a single JSON object.

The key expression must return a non-nullable character string. Value expressions can be arbitrary, including other JSON functions. If a value is NULL, the ON NULL behavior defines what to do. If omitted, NULL ON NULL is assumed by default.

Note that keys must be unique. If a key occurs multiple times, an error will be thrown.

This function is currently not supported in OVER windows.

-- '{"Apple":2,"Banana":17,"Orange":0}'
SELECT
  JSON_OBJECTAGG(KEY product VALUE cnt)
FROM orders
JSON_ARRAYAGG(items [ { NULL | ABSENT } ON NULL ]) jsonArrayAgg(JsonOnNull, itemExpression)

Builds a JSON object string by aggregating items into an array.

Item expressions can be arbitrary, including other JSON functions. If a value is NULL, the ON NULL behavior defines what to do. If omitted, ABSENT ON NULL is assumed by default.

This function is currently not supported in OVER windows, unbounded session windows, or hop windows.

-- '["Apple","Banana","Orange"]'
SELECT
  JSON_ARRAYAGG(product)
FROM orders

Time Interval and Point Unit Specifiers #

The following table lists specifiers for time interval and time point units.

For Table API, please use _ for spaces (e.g., DAY_TO_HOUR).

Time Interval Unit Time Point Unit
MILLENNIUM
CENTURY
DECADE
YEAR YEAR
YEAR TO MONTH
QUARTER QUARTER
MONTH MONTH
WEEK WEEK
DAY DAY
DAY TO HOUR
DAY TO MINUTE
DAY TO SECOND
HOUR HOUR
HOUR TO MINUTE
HOUR TO SECOND
MINUTE MINUTE
MINUTE TO SECOND
SECOND SECOND
MILLISECOND MILLISECOND
MICROSECOND MICROSECOND
NANOSECOND
EPOCH
DOY (SQL-only)
DOW (SQL-only)
EPOCH (SQL-only)
ISODOW (SQL-only)
ISOYEAR (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_YEAR (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_QUARTER (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_MONTH (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_WEEK (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_DAY (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_HOUR (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_MINUTE (SQL-only)
SQL_TSI_SECOND (SQL-only)

Back to top

Column Functions #

The column functions are used to select or deselect table columns.

Column functions are only used in Table API.
SYNTAX DESC
withColumns(…) select the specified columns
withoutColumns(…) deselect the columns specified
withAllColumns() select all columns (like SELECT * in SQL)

The detailed syntax is as follows:

columnFunction:
    withColumns(columnExprs)
    withoutColumns(columnExprs)
    withAllColumns()

columnExprs:
    columnExpr [, columnExpr]*

columnExpr:
    columnRef | columnIndex to columnIndex | columnName to columnName

columnRef:
    columnName(The field name that exists in the table) | columnIndex(a positive integer starting from 1)

The usage of the column function is illustrated in the following table. (Suppose we have a table with 5 columns: (a: Int, b: Long, c: String, d:String, e: String)):

API Usage Description
withColumns($(*)) select(withColumns($("*"))) = select($(“a”), $(“b”), $(“c”), $(“d”), $(“e”)) all the columns
withColumns(m to n) select(withColumns(range(2, 4))) = select($(“b”), $(“c”), $(“d”)) columns from m to n
withColumns(m, n, k) select(withColumns(lit(1), lit(3), $(“e”))) = select($(“a”), $(“c”), $(“e”)) columns m, n, k
withColumns(m, n to k) select(withColumns(lit(1), range(3, 5))) = select($(“a”), $(“c”), $(“d”), $(“e”)) mixing of the above two representation
withoutColumns(m to n) select(withoutColumns(range(2, 4))) = select($(“a”), $(“e”)) deselect columns from m to n
withoutColumns(m, n, k) select(withoutColumns(lit(1), lit(3), lit(5))) = select($(“b”), $(“d”)) deselect columns m, n, k
withoutColumns(m, n to k) select(withoutColumns(lit(1), range(3, 5))) = select($(“b”)) mixing of the above two representation

The column functions can be used in all places where column fields are expected, such as select, groupBy, orderBy, UDFs etc. e.g.:

table
    .groupBy(withColumns(range(1, 3)))
    .select(withColumns(range("a", "b")), myUDAgg(myUDF(withColumns(range(5, 20)))));
table
    .groupBy(withColumns(range(1, 3)))
    .select(withColumns('a to 'b), myUDAgg(myUDF(withColumns(5 to 20))))
table \
    .group_by(with_columns(range_(1, 3))) \
    .select(with_columns(range_('a', 'b')), myUDAgg(myUDF(with_columns(range_(5, 20)))))

Back to top