Filters in group_aggregate()

In this article, we walk through examples of group aggregation using filters. To test for yourself, use the data set we provide in prerequisites.

Prerequisites

Before attempting the following practice examples, follow these steps to upload the sample dataset:

Click the dropdown to see the steps to upload the data.
  1. Click here to download the sample data set.

  2. Sign in to your ThoughtSpot account, and click the Data tab.

  3. Click the more icon more 10px menu icon in the top-right of the screen. From the menu, select Upload data.

  4. Upload the data file, either by dragging and dropping it into the field provided, or by clicking Browse your files and selecting Meetings_tiny.csv.

    1. To answer Are the column names already defined in the file header?, select Yes.

    2. To answer Are the fields separated by?, select Comma (,).

  5. Select Next at the bottom right of the screen to proceed.

  6. Select Next to proceed without changing the column names. For the sake of the formulas used in the examples, column names should not be changed.

  7. Review the column types in Step 3 and select Upload to finish.

  8. Click the search icon on the final screen of the upload process to begin a search based on the sample data set.

Now let’s see what happens when you use filters in your search. The last argument of group_aggregate() allows you to specify whether ThoughtSpot should apply the filter from the search in the formula.

Adding filters through the search bar

In this example, we apply a filter in the search bar that filters for activity classification = "call".

  1. First, let’s look at what our table looks like with no filter. We use the following search:

    1. Search for: account activity classification hours sort by account.

    2. The following table results:

      Account Activity Classification Total Hours

      Amazon

      meeting

      11

      Oracle

      meeting

      18

      Redshift

      meeting

      5

      Redshift

      call

      1

      Snowflake

      meeting

      2

      Snowflake

      call

      5

  2. Now let’s add a filter for activity classification = "call".

    1. Search for: account activity classification hours activity classification = call sort by account.

    2. The following table results:

      Account Activity Classification Total Hours

      Redshift

      call

      1

      Snowflake

      call

      5

  3. Finally, let’s add a formula that aggregates hours to the account level of detail.

    1. Click the more options icon icon more 10px and select Create formula.

    2. In the formula pop-up window, name your formula. Here, we name the formula hours per account.

    3. Enter the following formula and click Save:

      average(
        group_aggregate(
          sum(hours),
          {account},
          {}
          )
        )
  4. Finally, add the hours per account formula to our search bar.

    1. Search for: account activity classification hours hours per account activity classification = call sort by account.

    2. The following table results:

      Table 1. Table 4.1.1
      Account Activity classification Total Hours Hours per account

      Redshift

      call

      1

      6.00

      Snowflake

      call

      5

      7.00

      This gives us a result which filters our rows to only rows that include "call", but note that Hours per account does not match Total Hours. Hours per account is aggregated without the filter, because the last argument of group_aggregate is {}.

      If you want your formula to take into account the filters specified in the search, you can use the query_filters() argument.

  5. Select Formulas from the left sidebar and click the edit icon next to "hours per account".

  6. In the formula window, enter the following formula and click Save:

    average(
      group_aggregate(
        sum(hours),
        {account},
        query_filters()
        )
      )

    Now your resulting table looks like this:

    Table 2. Table 4.1.2
    Account Activity Classification Total Hours Hours per account

    Redshift

    call

    1

    1.00

    Snowflake

    call

    5

    5.00

Adding filters to your formula

You can also include filters in your group_aggregate formula which are not in the search bar.

  1. Create the following formula if you want your formula to explicitly filter for activity classification = "call", regardless of what you add in the search bar:

    Hours per account
    average(
      group_aggregate(
        sum(hours),
        {account},
        {activity classification = "call"}
        )
      )
  2. Search for: account activity classification hours hours per account sort by account sort by activity classification

    The resulting table’s Hours per account column results in values that are filtered by "call", even though the table itself contains rows for both calls and meetings.

    Table 3. Example 4.2
    Account Activity Classification Total Hours Hours per account

    Amazon

    meeting

    11

    {null}

    Oracle

    meeting

    18

    {null}

    Redshift

    call

    1

    1

    Redshift

    meeting

    5

    1

    Snowflake

    call

    5

    5

    Snowflake

    meeting

    2

    5

Using multiple filters

You can put multiple filters in the filters argument of the group_aggregate function. For example, to filter on both activity classification and activity date:

  1. Create the following formula:

    Hours per account
    average(
      group_aggregate(
        sum(hours),
        {account},
        {activity classification = "call",
        activity date >= 04/01/2020 and activity date <= 04/14/2020
        }
        )
      )

    In the above example, ThoughtSpot adds the activity classification and activity date filters in an and condition together.

  2. Search for: account activity classification hours hours per account sort by account sort by activity classification.

    Table 4. Example 4.3
    Account Activity Classification Total Hours Hours per account

    Amazon

    meeting

    11

    {null}

    Oracle

    meeting

    18

    {null}

    Redshift

    call

    1

    1

    Redshift

    meeting

    5

    1

    Snowflake

    call

    5

    4

    Snowflake

    meeting

    2

    4

You can also use AND, OR, and parens, to flexibly combine filters as shown in following formula:

Hours per account
average(
  group_aggregate(
    sum(hours),
    {account},
    {activity classification = "call" OR (
      activity date >= 04/01/2020 and activity date <= 04/14/2020
      )
     }
    )
  )

Was this page helpful?