Group aggregation functions
What if you want to aggregate a value by a specific attribute (for example, show revenue by product)? This is known as a grouped aggregation, but some people call it a pinned measure or level-based measure. You can do this for any aggregation using the grouping functions.
Each of the grouping functions accepts a measure and one or more optional attributes:
formula (measure, [attribute, attribute, ...])
Only the measure value is required. If you supply both a measure and an attribute, the function returns the aggregate of the measure grouped by the attribute(s). You should experiment with only a measure and then with an attribute to see which output best meets your use case.
List of group functions
Group aggregation functions have names with formats like group_<aggregation>.
The group aggregation functions are the following:
| Function | Description |
|---|---|
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Takes a measure and optional attributes and filters. Used to aggregate measures with different granularities and filters than the columns used in the search. |
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Takes a measure and one or more attributes. Returns the average of the measure grouped by the attribute(s).
|
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Takes a measure and one or more attributes. Returns the count of the measure grouped by the attribute(s).
|
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Takes a measure and one or more attributes. Returns the maximum of the measure grouped by the attribute(s).
|
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Takes a measure and one or more attributes. Returns the minimum of the measure grouped by the attribute(s).
|
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Takes a measure and one or more attributes. Returns the standard deviation of the measure grouped by the attribute(s).
|
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Takes a measure and one or more attributes. Returns the sum of the measure grouped by the attribute(s).
|
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Takes a column name and one or more attributes. Returns the number of unique values in a column, grouped by the attribute(s).
|
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Takes a measure and one or more attributes. Returns the variance of the measure grouped by the attribute(s).
|
Flexible aggregation
The group_aggregate function gives you more control over aggregation and filtering.
See Flexible aggregation to learn more about specifying query_groups with this formula.
Limitations of group aggregation functions
Group aggregation functions have the following limitations:
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You can’t run SpotIQ analysis on a visualization that contains a group aggregation function.
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ThoughtSpot doesn’t support aggregate table summaries for formulas that have group aggregates and are conditional.
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You can’t run a
vsquery that also contains a group aggregation function. -
You can’t run a group function on a group function. If you would like to create a nested group aggregation function, you can do so by first saving the answer with the first level of the group function as a View, then using the View as the data source for a second answer with the second level of the group function.
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Any group aggregation function that returns a measure at the row level is implicitly reaggregated with a
sumto match the level of detail defined in the Search bar. To circumvent this behavior, define the aggregation type within the formula, for example,sum(revenue) + group_sum(tax). This behavior extends toif…then..elsestatements:if(revenue = 0) then group_sum(revenue) else 0would be reaggregated with asum, whileif (sum(revenue) = 0) then group_sum(revenue) else 0would not.