Windows can be defined and given names by which to refer to them
in OVER
clauses. To do this, use a
WINDOW
clause. If present in a query, the
WINDOW
clause falls between the positions of
the HAVING
and ORDER BY
clauses, and has this syntax:
WINDOW window_name AS (window_spec)
[, window_name AS (window_spec)] ...
For each window definition,
window_name
is the window name, and
window_spec
is the same type of
window specification as given between the parentheses of an
OVER
clause, as described in
Section 12.21.2, “Window Function Concepts and Syntax”:
window_spec:
[window_name] [partition_clause] [order_clause] [frame_clause]
A WINDOW
clause is useful for queries in
which multiple OVER
clauses would otherwise
define the same window. Instead, you can define the window once,
give it a name, and refer to the name in the
OVER
clauses. Consider this query, which
defines the same window multiple times:
SELECT
val,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY val) AS 'row_number',
RANK() OVER (ORDER BY val) AS 'rank',
DENSE_RANK() OVER (ORDER BY val) AS 'dense_rank'
FROM numbers;
The query can be written more simply by using
WINDOW
to define the window once and
referring to the window by name in the OVER
clauses:
SELECT
val,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER w AS 'row_number',
RANK() OVER w AS 'rank',
DENSE_RANK() OVER w AS 'dense_rank'
FROM numbers
WINDOW w AS (ORDER BY val);
A named window also makes it easier to experiment with the
window definition to see the effect on query results. You need
only modify the window definition in the
WINDOW
clause, rather than multiple
OVER
clause definitions.
If an OVER
clause uses OVER
(
rather
than window_name
...)OVER
, the named
window can be modified by the addition of other clauses. For
example, this query defines a window that includes partitioning,
and uses window_name
ORDER BY
in the
OVER
clauses to modify the window in
different ways:
SELECT
DISTINCT year, country,
FIRST_VALUE(year) OVER (w ORDER BY year ASC) AS first,
FIRST_VALUE(year) OVER (w ORDER BY year DESC) AS last
FROM sales
WINDOW w AS (PARTITION BY country);
An OVER
clause can only add properties to a
named window, not modify them. If the named window definition
includes a partitioning, ordering, or framing property, the
OVER
clause that refers to the window name
cannot also include the same kind of property or an error
occurs:
This construct is permitted because the window definition and the referring
OVER
clause do not contain the same kind of properties:OVER (w ORDER BY country) ... WINDOW w AS (PARTITION BY country)
This construct is not permitted because the
OVER
clause specifiesPARTITION BY
for a named window that already hasPARTITION BY
:OVER (w PARTITION BY year) ... WINDOW w AS (PARTITION BY country)
The definition of a named window can itself begin with a
window_name
. In such cases, forward
and backward references are permitted, but not cycles:
This is permitted; it contains forward and backward references but no cycles:
WINDOW w1 AS (w2), w2 AS (), w3 AS (w1)
This is not permitted because it contains a cycle:
WINDOW w1 AS (w2), w2 AS (w3), w3 AS (w1)