GoogleSQL for BigQuery supports the following interval functions.
Function list
Name | Summary |
---|---|
EXTRACT
|
Extracts part of an INTERVAL value.
|
JUSTIFY_DAYS
|
Normalizes the day part of an INTERVAL value.
|
JUSTIFY_HOURS
|
Normalizes the time part of an INTERVAL value.
|
JUSTIFY_INTERVAL
|
Normalizes the day and time parts of an INTERVAL value.
|
MAKE_INTERVAL
|
Constructs an INTERVAL value.
|
EXTRACT
EXTRACT(part FROM interval_expression)
Description
Returns the value corresponding to the specified date part. The part
must be
one of YEAR
, MONTH
, DAY
, HOUR
, MINUTE
, SECOND
, MILLISECOND
or
MICROSECOND
.
Return Data Type
INTERVAL
Examples
In the following example, different parts of two intervals are extracted.
SELECT
EXTRACT(YEAR FROM i) AS year,
EXTRACT(MONTH FROM i) AS month,
EXTRACT(DAY FROM i) AS day,
EXTRACT(HOUR FROM i) AS hour,
EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM i) AS minute,
EXTRACT(SECOND FROM i) AS second,
EXTRACT(MILLISECOND FROM i) AS milli,
EXTRACT(MICROSECOND FROM i) AS micro
FROM
UNNEST([INTERVAL '1-2 3 4:5:6.789999' YEAR TO SECOND,
INTERVAL '0-13 370 48:61:61' YEAR TO SECOND]) AS i
/*------+-------+-----+------+--------+--------+-------+--------*
| year | month | day | hour | minute | second | milli | micro |
+------+-------+-----+------+--------+--------+-------+--------+
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 789 | 789999 |
| 1 | 1 | 370 | 49 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
*------+-------+-----+------+--------+--------+-------+--------*/
When a negative sign precedes the time part in an interval, the negative sign distributes over the hours, minutes, and seconds. For example:
SELECT
EXTRACT(HOUR FROM i) AS hour,
EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM i) AS minute
FROM
UNNEST([INTERVAL '10 -12:30' DAY TO MINUTE]) AS i
/*------+--------*
| hour | minute |
+------+--------+
| -12 | -30 |
*------+--------*/
When a negative sign precedes the year and month part in an interval, the negative sign distributes over the years and months. For example:
SELECT
EXTRACT(YEAR FROM i) AS year,
EXTRACT(MONTH FROM i) AS month
FROM
UNNEST([INTERVAL '-22-6 10 -12:30' YEAR TO MINUTE]) AS i
/*------+--------*
| year | month |
+------+--------+
| -22 | -6 |
*------+--------*/
JUSTIFY_DAYS
JUSTIFY_DAYS(interval_expression)
Description
Normalizes the day part of the interval to the range from -29 to 29 by incrementing/decrementing the month or year part of the interval.
Return Data Type
INTERVAL
Example
SELECT
JUSTIFY_DAYS(INTERVAL 29 DAY) AS i1,
JUSTIFY_DAYS(INTERVAL -30 DAY) AS i2,
JUSTIFY_DAYS(INTERVAL 31 DAY) AS i3,
JUSTIFY_DAYS(INTERVAL -65 DAY) AS i4,
JUSTIFY_DAYS(INTERVAL 370 DAY) AS i5
/*--------------+--------------+-------------+---------------+--------------*
| i1 | i2 | i3 | i4 | i5 |
+--------------+--------------+-------------+---------------+--------------+
| 0-0 29 0:0:0 | -0-1 0 0:0:0 | 0-1 1 0:0:0 | -0-2 -5 0:0:0 | 1-0 10 0:0:0 |
*--------------+--------------+-------------+---------------+--------------*/
JUSTIFY_HOURS
JUSTIFY_HOURS(interval_expression)
Description
Normalizes the time part of the interval to the range from -23:59:59.999999 to 23:59:59.999999 by incrementing/decrementing the day part of the interval.
Return Data Type
INTERVAL
Example
SELECT
JUSTIFY_HOURS(INTERVAL 23 HOUR) AS i1,
JUSTIFY_HOURS(INTERVAL -24 HOUR) AS i2,
JUSTIFY_HOURS(INTERVAL 47 HOUR) AS i3,
JUSTIFY_HOURS(INTERVAL -12345 MINUTE) AS i4
/*--------------+--------------+--------------+-----------------*
| i1 | i2 | i3 | i4 |
+--------------+--------------+--------------+-----------------+
| 0-0 0 23:0:0 | 0-0 -1 0:0:0 | 0-0 1 23:0:0 | 0-0 -8 -13:45:0 |
*--------------+--------------+--------------+-----------------*/
JUSTIFY_INTERVAL
JUSTIFY_INTERVAL(interval_expression)
Description
Normalizes the days and time parts of the interval.
Return Data Type
INTERVAL
Example
SELECT JUSTIFY_INTERVAL(INTERVAL '29 49:00:00' DAY TO SECOND) AS i
/*-------------*
| i |
+-------------+
| 0-1 1 1:0:0 |
*-------------*/
MAKE_INTERVAL
MAKE_INTERVAL(
[ [ year => ] value ]
[, [ month => ] value ]
[, [ day => ] value ]
[, [ hour => ] value ]
[, [ minute => ] value ]
[, [ second => ] value ]
)
Description
Constructs an INTERVAL
object using INT64
values
representing the year, month, day, hour, minute, and second. All arguments are
optional, 0
by default, and can be named arguments.
Return Data Type
INTERVAL
Example
SELECT
MAKE_INTERVAL(1, 6, 15) AS i1,
MAKE_INTERVAL(hour => 10, second => 20) AS i2,
MAKE_INTERVAL(1, minute => 5, day => 2) AS i3
/*--------------+---------------+-------------*
| i1 | i2 | i3 |
+--------------+---------------+-------------+
| 1-6 15 0:0:0 | 0-0 0 10:0:20 | 1-0 2 0:5:0 |
*--------------+---------------+-------------*/