Tuple(T1, T2, ...)¶
A tuple of elements, each having an individual type. Tuple must contain at least one element.
Tuples are used for temporary column grouping. Columns can be grouped when an IN expression is used in a query, and for specifying certain formal parameters of lambda functions. For more information, see the sections IN operators and Higher order functions.
Tuples can be the result of a query. In this case, for text formats other than JSON, values are comma-separated in brackets. In JSON formats, tuples are output as arrays (in square brackets).
Creating Tuples¶
You can use a function to create a tuple:
tuple(T1, T2, ...)
Example of creating a tuple:
SELECT tuple(1, 'a') AS x, toTypeName(x)
┌─x───────┬─toTypeName(tuple(1, 'a'))─┐ │ (1,'a') │ Tuple(UInt8, String) │ └─────────┴───────────────────────────┘
A Tuple can contain a single element
Example:
SELECT tuple('a') AS x;
┌─x─────┐ │ ('a') │ └───────┘
Syntax (tuple_element1, tuple_element2)
may be used to create a tuple of several elements without calling the tuple()
function.
Example:
SELECT (1, 'a') AS x, (today(), rand(), 'someString') AS y, ('a') AS not_a_tuple;
┌─x───────┬─y──────────────────────────────────────┬─not_a_tuple─┐ │ (1,'a') │ ('2022-09-21',2006973416,'someString') │ a │ └─────────┴────────────────────────────────────────┴─────────────┘
Data type detection¶
When creating tuples on the fly, Tinybird interferes the type of the tuples arguments as the smallest types which can hold the provided argument value. If the value is NULL, the interfered type is Nullable.
Example of automatic data type detection:
SELECT tuple(1, NULL) AS x, toTypeName(x)
┌─x─────────┬─toTypeName(tuple(1, NULL))──────┐ │ (1, NULL) │ Tuple(UInt8, Nullable(Nothing)) │ └───────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘
Referring to tuple elements¶
Tuple elements can be referred to by name or by index:
SELECT a.s FROM named_tuples; -- by name SELECT a.2 FROM named_tuples; -- by index
Result:
┌─a.s─┐ │ y │ │ x │ └─────┘ ┌─tupleElement(a, 2)─┐ │ 10 │ │ -10 │ └────────────────────┘
Comparison operations with Tuple¶
Two tuples are compared by sequentially comparing their elements from the left to the right. If first tuples element is greater (smaller) than the second tuples corresponding element, then the first tuple is greater (smaller) than the second, otherwise (both elements are equal), the next element is compared.
Example:
SELECT (1, 'z') > (1, 'a') c1, (2022, 01, 02) > (2023, 04, 02) c2, (1,2,3) = (3,2,1) c3;
┌─c1─┬─c2─┬─c3─┐ │ 1 │ 0 │ 0 │ └────┴────┴────┘
Real world examples:
SELECT * FROM values((2022, 12, 31), (2000, 1, 1)); SELECT * FROM test; ┌─year─┬─month─┬─day─┐ │ 2022 │ 12 │ 31 │ │ 2000 │ 1 │ 1 │ └──────┴───────┴─────┘ SELECT * FROM test WHERE (year, month, day) > (2010, 1, 1); ┌─year─┬─month─┬─day─┐ │ 2022 │ 12 │ 31 │ └──────┴───────┴─────┘ SELECT * FROM values((1, 42, 66.5), (1, 42, 70), (2, 1, 10), (2, 2, 0)); SELECT * FROM test; ┌─key─┬─duration─┬─value─┐ │ 1 │ 42 │ 66.5 │ │ 1 │ 42 │ 70 │ │ 2 │ 1 │ 10 │ │ 2 │ 2 │ 0 │ └─────┴──────────┴───────┘ -- Let's find a value for each key with the biggest duration, if durations are equal, select the biggest value SELECT key, max(duration), argMax(value, (duration, value)) FROM test GROUP BY key ORDER BY key ASC; ┌─key─┬─max(duration)─┬─argMax(value, tuple(duration, value))─┐ │ 1 │ 42 │ 70 │ │ 2 │ 2 │ 0 │ └─────┴───────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘