10.3. Ordering
The ORDER BY
sub-clause can be used with or without partitions.
The ORDER BY
clause within OVER
specifies the order in which the window function will process rows.
This order does not have to be the same as the order rows appear in the output.
There is an important concept associated with window functions: for each row there is a set of rows in its partition called the window frame.
By default, when specifying ORDER BY
, the frame consists of all lines from the beginning of the partition to the current row and rows equal to the current ORDER BY
expression.
Without ORDER BY
, the default frame consists of all rows in the partition.
As a result, for standard aggregate functions, the ORDER BY
clause produces partial aggregation results as rows are processed.
Example
|
select
| id,
| salary,
| sum(salary) over (order by salary) cumul_salary
| from employee
| order by salary;
Results
|
id salary cumul_salary
|-- ------ ------------
|3 8.00 8.00
|4 9.00 17.00
|1 10.00 37.00
|5 10.00 37.00
|2 12.00 49.00
Then cumul_salary
returns the partial/accumulated (or running) aggregation (of the SUM
function).
It may appear strange that 37.00 is repeated for the ids 1 and 5, but that is how it should work.
The ORDER BY
keys are grouped together and the aggregation is computed once (but summing the two 10.00).
To avoid this, you can add the ID
field to the end of the ORDER BY
clause.
It’s possible to use multiple windows with different orders, and ORDER BY
parts like ASC
/DESC
and NULLS FIRST/LAST
.
With a partition, ORDER BY
works the same way, but at each partition boundary the aggregation is reset.
All aggregation functions can use ORDER BY
, except for LIST()
.