String Functions and Operators¶
String Operators¶
The ||
operator performs concatenation.
String Functions¶
Note
These functions assume that the input strings contain valid UTF-8 encoded
Unicode code points. There are no explicit checks for valid UTF-8 and
the functions may return incorrect results on invalid UTF-8.
Invalid UTF-8 data can be corrected with from_utf8()
.
Additionally, the functions operate on Unicode code points and not user visible characters (or grapheme clusters). Some languages combine multiple code points into a single user-perceived character, the basic unit of a writing system for a language, but the functions will treat each code point as a separate unit.
The lower()
and upper()
functions do not perform
locale-sensitive, context-sensitive, or one-to-many mappings required for
some languages. Specifically, this will return incorrect results for
Lithuanian, Turkish and Azeri.
- chr(n) -> varchar()¶
Returns the Unicode code point
n
as a single character string.
- codepoint(string) -> integer()¶
Returns the Unicode code point of the only character of
string
.
- concat(string1, ..., stringN) -> varchar()¶
Returns the concatenation of
string1
,string2
,...
,stringN
. This function provides the same functionality as the SQL-standard concatenation operator (||
).
- ends_with(string, substring) -> boolean()¶
Returns whether
string
ends_with withsubstring
.
- hamming_distance(string1, string2) -> bigint()¶
Returns the Hamming distance of
string1
andstring2
, i.e. the number of positions at which the corresponding characters are different. Note that the two strings must have the same length.
- length(string) -> bigint()¶
Returns the length of
string
in characters.
- levenshtein_distance(string1, string2) -> bigint()¶
Returns the Levenshtein edit distance of
string1
andstring2
, i.e. the minimum number of single-character edits (insertions, deletions or substitutions) needed to changestring1
intostring2
.
- lower(string) -> varchar()¶
Converts
string
to lowercase.
- lpad(string, size, padstring) -> varchar()¶
Left pads
string
tosize
characters withpadstring
. Ifsize
is less than the length ofstring
, the result is truncated tosize
characters.size
must not be negative andpadstring
must be non-empty.
- ltrim(string) -> varchar()¶
Removes leading whitespace from
string
. Seetrim()
for the set of recognized whitespace characters.
- ltrim(string, chars) -> varchar()
Removes the longest substring containing only characters in
chars
from the beginning of thestring
.SELECT ltrim('test', 't'); -- est SELECT ltrim('tetris', 'te'); -- ris
- replace(string, search) -> varchar()¶
Removes all instances of
search
fromstring
.
- replace(string, search, replace) -> varchar()¶
Replaces all instances of
search
withreplace
instring
.If
search
is an empty string, insertsreplace
in front of every character and at the end of thestring
.
- replace_first(string, search, replace) -> varchar()¶
- Replaces the first instances of ``search`` with ``replace`` in ``string``.()¶
If
search
is an empty string, it insertsreplace
at the beginning of thestring
.
- reverse(string) -> varchar()¶
Returns
string
with the characters in reverse order.
- rpad(string, size, padstring) -> varchar()¶
Right pads
string
tosize
characters withpadstring
. Ifsize
is less than the length ofstring
, the result is truncated tosize
characters.size
must not be negative andpadstring
must be non-empty.
- rtrim(string) -> varchar()¶
Removes trailing whitespace from
string
. Seetrim()
for the set of recognized whitespace characters.
- rtrim(string, chars) -> varchar()
Removes the longest substring containing only characters in
chars
from the end of thestring
.SELECT rtrim('test', 't'); -- tes SELECT rtrim('test...', '.'); -- test
- split(string, delimiter) -> array(varchar)¶
Splits
string
ondelimiter
and returns an array.
- split(string, delimiter, limit) -> array(varchar)¶
Splits
string
ondelimiter
and returns an array of size at mostlimit
. The last element in the array always contain everything left in thestring
.limit
must be a positive number.
- split_part(string, delimiter, index) -> varchar()¶
Splits
string
ondelimiter
and returns the fieldindex
. Field indexes start with1
. If the index is larger than than the number of fields, then null is returned.
- split_to_map(string, entryDelimiter, keyValueDelimiter) -> map<varchar, varchar>()¶
Splits
string
byentryDelimiter
andkeyValueDelimiter
and returns a map.entryDelimiter
splitsstring
into key-value pairs.keyValueDelimiter
splits each pair into key and value. Note thatentryDelimiter
andkeyValueDelimiter
are interpreted literally, i.e., as full string matches.
- split_to_map(string, entryDelimiter, keyValueDelimiter, function(K,V1,V2,R)) -> map<varchar, varchar>()¶
Splits
string
byentryDelimiter
andkeyValueDelimiter
and returns a map.entryDelimiter
splitsstring
into key-value pairs.keyValueDelimiter
splits each pair into key and value. Note thatentryDelimiter
andkeyValueDelimiter
are interpreted literally, i.e., as full string matches.function(K,V1,V2,R)
is invoked in cases of duplicate keys to resolve the value that should be in the map.SELECT(split_to_map('a:1;b:2;a:3', ';', ':', (k, v1, v2) -> v1)); -- {"a": "1", "b": "2"} SELECT(split_to_map('a:1;b:2;a:3', ';', ':', (k, v1, v2) -> CONCAT(v1, v2))); -- {"a": "13", "b": "2"}
- split_to_multimap(string, entryDelimiter, keyValueDelimiter) -> map(varchar, array(varchar))¶
Splits
string
byentryDelimiter
andkeyValueDelimiter
and returns a map containing an array of values for each unique key.entryDelimiter
splitsstring
into key-value pairs.keyValueDelimiter
splits each pair into key and value. The values for each key will be in the same order as they appeared instring
. Note thatentryDelimiter
andkeyValueDelimiter
are interpreted literally, i.e., as full string matches.
- strpos(string, substring) -> bigint()¶
Returns the starting position of the first instance of
substring
instring
. Positions start with1
. If not found,0
is returned.
- starts_with(string, substring) -> boolean()¶
Returns whether
string
starts withsubstring
.
- strpos(string, substring, instance) -> bigint()¶
Returns the position of the N-th
instance
ofsubstring
instring
.instance
must be a positive number. Positions start with1
. If not found,0
is returned.
- strrpos(string, substring) -> bigint()¶
Returns the starting position of the last instance of
substring
instring
. Positions start with1
. If not found,0
is returned.
- strrpos(string, substring, instance) -> bigint()¶
Returns the position of the N-th
instance
ofsubstring
instring
starting from the end of the string.instance
must be a positive number. Positions start with1
. If not found,0
is returned.
- position(substring IN string) -> bigint()¶
Returns the starting position of the first instance of
substring
instring
. Positions start with1
. If not found,0
is returned.
- substr(string, start) -> varchar()¶
Returns the rest of
string
from the starting positionstart
. Positions start with1
. A negative starting position is interpreted as being relative to the end of the string.
- substr(string, start, length) -> varchar()¶
Returns a substring from
string
of lengthlength
from the starting positionstart
. Positions start with1
. A negative starting position is interpreted as being relative to the end of the string.
- trail(string, N) -> varchar()¶
Returns the last N characters of the input string.
- trim(string) -> varchar()¶
Removes leading and trailing whitespace from
string
.Recognized whitespace characters:
Code
Description
Code
Description
9
TAB (horizontal tab)
U+1680
Ogham Space Mark
10
LF (NL line feed, new line)
U+2000
En Quad
11
VT (vertical tab)
U+2001
Em Quad
12
FF (NP form feed, new page)
U+2002
En Space
13
CR (carriage return)
U+2003
Em Space
28
FS (file separator)
U+2004
Three-Per-Em Space
29
GS (group separator)
U+2005
Four-Per-Em Space
30
RS (record separator)
U+2006
Four-Per-Em Space
31
US (unit separator)
U+2008
Punctuation Space
32
Space
U+2009
Thin Space
_
_
U+200a
Hair Space
_
_
U+200a
Hair Space
_
_
U+2028
Line Separator
_
_
U+2029
Paragraph Separator
_
_
U+205f
Medium Mathematical Space
_
_
U+3000
Ideographic Space
- trim(string, chars) -> varchar()
Removes the longest substring containing only characters in
chars
from the beginning and end of thestring
.SELECT trim('test', 't'); -- es SELECT trim('.t.e.s.t.', '.t'); -- e.s
- upper(string) -> varchar()¶
Converts
string
to uppercase.
- word_stem(word) -> varchar()¶
Returns the stem of
word
in the English language.
- word_stem(word, lang) -> varchar()¶
Returns the stem of
word
in thelang
language.
Unicode Functions¶
- normalize(string) -> varchar()¶
Transforms
string
with NFC normalization form.
- normalize(string, form) -> varchar()¶
Transforms
string
with the specified normalization form.form
must be be one of the following keywords:Form
Description
NFD
Canonical Decomposition
NFC
Canonical Decomposition, followed by Canonical Composition
NFKD
Compatibility Decomposition
NFKC
Compatibility Decomposition, followed by Canonical Composition
Note
This SQL-standard function has special syntax and requires specifying
form
as a keyword, not as a string.
- to_utf8(string) -> varbinary()¶
Encodes
string
into a UTF-8 varbinary representation.
- from_utf8(binary) -> varchar()¶
Decodes a UTF-8 encoded string from
binary
. Invalid UTF-8 sequences are replaced with the Unicode replacement characterU+FFFD
.
- from_utf8(binary, replace) -> varchar()¶
Decodes a UTF-8 encoded string from
binary
. Invalid UTF-8 sequences are replaced with replace. The replacement string replace must either be a single character or empty (in which case invalid characters are removed).
- key_sampling_percent(varchar) -> double()¶
Generates a double value between 0.0 and 1.0 based on the hash of the given
varchar
. This function is useful for deterministic sampling of data.