2
0

aggregates.txt 7.2 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260
  1. =========================================
  2. PostgreSQL specific aggregation functions
  3. =========================================
  4. .. module:: django.contrib.postgres.aggregates
  5. :synopsis: PostgreSQL specific aggregation functions
  6. These functions are available from the ``django.contrib.postgres.aggregates``
  7. module. They are described in more detail in the `PostgreSQL docs
  8. <https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/functions-aggregate.html>`_.
  9. .. note::
  10. All functions come without default aliases, so you must explicitly provide
  11. one. For example::
  12. >>> SomeModel.objects.aggregate(arr=ArrayAgg('somefield'))
  13. {'arr': [0, 1, 2]}
  14. .. admonition:: Common aggregate options
  15. All aggregates have the :ref:`filter <aggregate-filter>` keyword
  16. argument.
  17. General-purpose aggregation functions
  18. =====================================
  19. ``ArrayAgg``
  20. ------------
  21. .. class:: ArrayAgg(expression, distinct=False, filter=None, ordering=(), **extra)
  22. Returns a list of values, including nulls, concatenated into an array.
  23. .. attribute:: distinct
  24. An optional boolean argument that determines if array values
  25. will be distinct. Defaults to ``False``.
  26. .. attribute:: ordering
  27. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  28. An optional string of a field name (with an optional ``"-"`` prefix
  29. which indicates descending order) or an expression (or a tuple or list
  30. of strings and/or expressions) that specifies the ordering of the
  31. elements in the result list.
  32. Examples::
  33. 'some_field'
  34. '-some_field'
  35. from django.db.models import F
  36. F('some_field').desc()
  37. ``BitAnd``
  38. ----------
  39. .. class:: BitAnd(expression, filter=None, **extra)
  40. Returns an ``int`` of the bitwise ``AND`` of all non-null input values, or
  41. ``None`` if all values are null.
  42. ``BitOr``
  43. ---------
  44. .. class:: BitOr(expression, filter=None, **extra)
  45. Returns an ``int`` of the bitwise ``OR`` of all non-null input values, or
  46. ``None`` if all values are null.
  47. ``BoolAnd``
  48. -----------
  49. .. class:: BoolAnd(expression, filter=None, **extra)
  50. Returns ``True``, if all input values are true, ``None`` if all values are
  51. null or if there are no values, otherwise ``False`` .
  52. ``BoolOr``
  53. ----------
  54. .. class:: BoolOr(expression, filter=None, **extra)
  55. Returns ``True`` if at least one input value is true, ``None`` if all
  56. values are null or if there are no values, otherwise ``False``.
  57. ``JSONBAgg``
  58. ------------
  59. .. class:: JSONBAgg(expressions, filter=None, **extra)
  60. Returns the input values as a ``JSON`` array. Requires PostgreSQL ≥ 9.5.
  61. ``StringAgg``
  62. -------------
  63. .. class:: StringAgg(expression, delimiter, distinct=False, filter=None, ordering=())
  64. Returns the input values concatenated into a string, separated by
  65. the ``delimiter`` string.
  66. .. attribute:: delimiter
  67. Required argument. Needs to be a string.
  68. .. attribute:: distinct
  69. An optional boolean argument that determines if concatenated values
  70. will be distinct. Defaults to ``False``.
  71. .. attribute:: ordering
  72. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  73. An optional string of a field name (with an optional ``"-"`` prefix
  74. which indicates descending order) or an expression (or a tuple or list
  75. of strings and/or expressions) that specifies the ordering of the
  76. elements in the result string.
  77. Examples are the same as for :attr:`ArrayAgg.ordering`.
  78. Aggregate functions for statistics
  79. ==================================
  80. ``y`` and ``x``
  81. ---------------
  82. The arguments ``y`` and ``x`` for all these functions can be the name of a
  83. field or an expression returning a numeric data. Both are required.
  84. ``Corr``
  85. --------
  86. .. class:: Corr(y, x, filter=None)
  87. Returns the correlation coefficient as a ``float``, or ``None`` if there
  88. aren't any matching rows.
  89. ``CovarPop``
  90. ------------
  91. .. class:: CovarPop(y, x, sample=False, filter=None)
  92. Returns the population covariance as a ``float``, or ``None`` if there
  93. aren't any matching rows.
  94. Has one optional argument:
  95. .. attribute:: sample
  96. By default ``CovarPop`` returns the general population covariance.
  97. However, if ``sample=True``, the return value will be the sample
  98. population covariance.
  99. ``RegrAvgX``
  100. ------------
  101. .. class:: RegrAvgX(y, x, filter=None)
  102. Returns the average of the independent variable (``sum(x)/N``) as a
  103. ``float``, or ``None`` if there aren't any matching rows.
  104. ``RegrAvgY``
  105. ------------
  106. .. class:: RegrAvgY(y, x, filter=None)
  107. Returns the average of the dependent variable (``sum(y)/N``) as a
  108. ``float``, or ``None`` if there aren't any matching rows.
  109. ``RegrCount``
  110. -------------
  111. .. class:: RegrCount(y, x, filter=None)
  112. Returns an ``int`` of the number of input rows in which both expressions
  113. are not null.
  114. ``RegrIntercept``
  115. -----------------
  116. .. class:: RegrIntercept(y, x, filter=None)
  117. Returns the y-intercept of the least-squares-fit linear equation determined
  118. by the ``(x, y)`` pairs as a ``float``, or ``None`` if there aren't any
  119. matching rows.
  120. ``RegrR2``
  121. ----------
  122. .. class:: RegrR2(y, x, filter=None)
  123. Returns the square of the correlation coefficient as a ``float``, or
  124. ``None`` if there aren't any matching rows.
  125. ``RegrSlope``
  126. -------------
  127. .. class:: RegrSlope(y, x, filter=None)
  128. Returns the slope of the least-squares-fit linear equation determined
  129. by the ``(x, y)`` pairs as a ``float``, or ``None`` if there aren't any
  130. matching rows.
  131. ``RegrSXX``
  132. -----------
  133. .. class:: RegrSXX(y, x, filter=None)
  134. Returns ``sum(x^2) - sum(x)^2/N`` ("sum of squares" of the independent
  135. variable) as a ``float``, or ``None`` if there aren't any matching rows.
  136. ``RegrSXY``
  137. -----------
  138. .. class:: RegrSXY(y, x, filter=None)
  139. Returns ``sum(x*y) - sum(x) * sum(y)/N`` ("sum of products" of independent
  140. times dependent variable) as a ``float``, or ``None`` if there aren't any
  141. matching rows.
  142. ``RegrSYY``
  143. -----------
  144. .. class:: RegrSYY(y, x, filter=None)
  145. Returns ``sum(y^2) - sum(y)^2/N`` ("sum of squares" of the dependent
  146. variable) as a ``float``, or ``None`` if there aren't any matching rows.
  147. Usage examples
  148. ==============
  149. We will use this example table::
  150. | FIELD1 | FIELD2 | FIELD3 |
  151. |--------|--------|--------|
  152. | foo | 1 | 13 |
  153. | bar | 2 | (null) |
  154. | test | 3 | 13 |
  155. Here's some examples of some of the general-purpose aggregation functions::
  156. >>> TestModel.objects.aggregate(result=StringAgg('field1', delimiter=';'))
  157. {'result': 'foo;bar;test'}
  158. >>> TestModel.objects.aggregate(result=ArrayAgg('field2'))
  159. {'result': [1, 2, 3]}
  160. >>> TestModel.objects.aggregate(result=ArrayAgg('field1'))
  161. {'result': ['foo', 'bar', 'test']}
  162. The next example shows the usage of statistical aggregate functions. The
  163. underlying math will be not described (you can read about this, for example, at
  164. `wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regression_analysis>`_)::
  165. >>> TestModel.objects.aggregate(count=RegrCount(y='field3', x='field2'))
  166. {'count': 2}
  167. >>> TestModel.objects.aggregate(avgx=RegrAvgX(y='field3', x='field2'),
  168. ... avgy=RegrAvgY(y='field3', x='field2'))
  169. {'avgx': 2, 'avgy': 13}