Migrating to GoogleSQL

BigQuery supports two SQL dialects: GoogleSQL and legacy SQL. This document explains the differences between the two dialects, including syntax, functions, and semantics, and gives examples of some of the highlights of GoogleSQL.

Comparison of legacy and GoogleSQL

When initially released, BigQuery ran queries using a non-GoogleSQL dialect known as BigQuery SQL. With the launch of BigQuery 2.0, BigQuery released support for GoogleSQL, and renamed BigQuery SQL to legacy SQL. GoogleSQL is the preferred SQL dialect for querying data stored in BigQuery.

Do I have to migrate to GoogleSQL?

We recommend migrating from legacy SQL to GoogleSQL, but it's not required. For example, suppose that you execute many queries that use legacy SQL, but you want to take advantage of a GoogleSQL feature for a new query. You can create new queries using GoogleSQL that run alongside queries using legacy SQL.

Enabling GoogleSQL

You have a choice of whether to use legacy or GoogleSQL when you run a query. For information about switching between SQL dialects, see BigQuery SQL dialects.

Advantages of GoogleSQL

GoogleSQL complies with the SQL 2011 standard, and has extensions that support querying nested and repeated data. It has several advantages over legacy SQL, including:

For examples that demonstrate some of these features, see GoogleSQL highlights.

Type differences

Legacy SQL types have an equivalent in GoogleSQL and vice versa. In some cases, the type has a different name. The following table lists each legacy SQL data type and its GoogleSQL equivalent.

Legacy SQL GoogleSQL Notes
BOOL BOOL
INTEGER INT64
FLOAT FLOAT64
STRING STRING
BYTES BYTES
RECORD STRUCT
REPEATED ARRAY
TIMESTAMP TIMESTAMP See TIMESTAMP differences
DATE DATE Legacy SQL has limited support for DATE
TIME TIME Legacy SQL has limited support for TIME
DATETIME DATETIME Legacy SQL has limited support for DATETIME

For more information about the GoogleSQL type system, see the GoogleSQL data types reference. For more information about data types in BigQuery, see the BigQuery data types reference.

TIMESTAMP differences

GoogleSQL has a stricter range of valid TIMESTAMP values than legacy SQL does. In GoogleSQL, valid TIMESTAMP values are in the range of 0001-01-01 00:00:00.000000 to 9999-12-31 23:59:59.999999. For example, you can select the minimum and maximum TIMESTAMP values using GoogleSQL:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  min_timestamp,
  max_timestamp,
  UNIX_MICROS(min_timestamp) AS min_unix_micros,
  UNIX_MICROS(max_timestamp) AS max_unix_micros
FROM (
  SELECT
    TIMESTAMP '0001-01-01 00:00:00.000000' AS min_timestamp,
    TIMESTAMP '9999-12-31 23:59:59.999999' AS max_timestamp
);

This query returns -62135596800000000 as min_unix_micros and 253402300799999999 as max_unix_micros.

If you select a column that contains timestamp values outside of this range, you receive an error:

#standardSQL
SELECT timestamp_column_with_invalid_values
FROM MyTableWithInvalidTimestamps;

This query returns the following error:

Cannot return an invalid timestamp value of -8446744073709551617
microseconds relative to the Unix epoch. The range of valid
timestamp values is [0001-01-1 00:00:00, 9999-12-31 23:59:59.999999]

To correct the error, one option is to define and use a user-defined function to filter the invalid timestamps:

#standardSQL
CREATE TEMP FUNCTION TimestampIsValid(t TIMESTAMP) AS (
  t >= TIMESTAMP('0001-01-01 00:00:00') AND
  t <= TIMESTAMP('9999-12-31 23:59:59.999999')
);

SELECT timestamp_column_with_invalid_values
FROM MyTableWithInvalidTimestamps
WHERE TimestampIsValid(timestamp_column_with_invalid_values);

Another option to correct the error is to use the SAFE_CAST function with the timestamp column. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT SAFE_CAST(timestamp_column_with_invalid_values AS STRING) AS timestamp_string
FROM MyTableWithInvalidTimestamps;

This query returns NULL rather than a timestamp string for invalid timestamp values.

GoogleSQL highlights

This section discusses some of the highlights of GoogleSQL compared to legacy SQL.

Composability using WITH clauses

Some of the GoogleSQL examples on this page make use of a WITH clause, which enables extraction or reuse of named subqueries. For example:

#standardSQL
WITH T AS (
  SELECT x FROM UNNEST([1, 2, 3, 4]) AS x
)
SELECT x / (SELECT SUM(x) FROM T) AS weighted_x
FROM T;

This query defines a named subquery T that contains x values of 1, 2, 3, and 4. It selects x values from T and divides them by the sum of all x values in T. This query is equivalent to a query where the contents of T are inline:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  x / (SELECT SUM(x)
       FROM (SELECT x FROM UNNEST([1, 2, 3, 4]) AS x)) AS weighted_x
FROM (SELECT x FROM UNNEST([1, 2, 3, 4]) AS x);

As another example, consider this query, which uses multiple named subqueries:

#standardSQL
WITH T AS (
  SELECT x FROM UNNEST([1, 2, 3, 4]) AS x
),
TPlusOne AS (
  SELECT x + 1 AS y
  FROM T
),
TPlusOneTimesTwo AS (
  SELECT y * 2 AS z
  FROM TPlusOne
)
SELECT z
FROM TPlusOneTimesTwo;

This query defines a sequence of transformations of the original data, followed by a SELECT statement over TPlusOneTimesTwo. This query is equivalent to the following query, which inlines the computations:

#standardSQL
SELECT (x + 1) * 2 AS z
FROM (SELECT x FROM UNNEST([1, 2, 3, 4]) AS x);

For more information, see WITH clause.

Composability using SQL functions

GoogleSQL supports user-defined SQL functions. You can use user-defined SQL functions to define common expressions and then reference them from the query. For example:

#standardSQL
-- Computes the harmonic mean of the elements in 'arr'.
-- The harmonic mean of x_1, x_2, ..., x_n can be expressed as:
--   n / ((1 / x_1) + (1 / x_2) + ... + (1 / x_n))
CREATE TEMPORARY FUNCTION HarmonicMean(arr ARRAY<FLOAT64>) AS
(
  ARRAY_LENGTH(arr) / (SELECT SUM(1 / x) FROM UNNEST(arr) AS x)
);

WITH T AS (
  SELECT GENERATE_ARRAY(1.0, x * 4, x) AS arr
  FROM UNNEST([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) AS x
)
SELECT arr, HarmonicMean(arr) AS h_mean
FROM T;

This query defines a SQL function named HarmonicMean and then applies it to the array column arr from T.

Subqueries in more places

GoogleSQL supports subqueries in the SELECT list, WHERE clause, and anywhere else in the query that expects an expression. For example, consider the following GoogleSQL query that computes the fraction of warm days in Seattle in 2015:

#standardSQL
WITH SeattleWeather AS (
  SELECT *
  FROM `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.gsod2015`
  WHERE stn = '994014'
)
SELECT
  COUNTIF(max >= 70) /
    (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM SeattleWeather) AS warm_days_fraction
FROM SeattleWeather;

The Seattle weather station has an ID of '994014'. The query computes the number of warm days based on those where the temperature reached 70 degrees Fahrenheit, or approximately 21 degrees Celsius, divided by the total number of recorded days for that station in 2015.

Correlated subqueries

In GoogleSQL, subqueries can reference correlated columns; that is, columns that originate from the outer query. For example, consider the following GoogleSQL query:

#standardSQL
WITH WashingtonStations AS (
  SELECT weather.stn AS station_id, ANY_VALUE(station.name) AS name
  FROM `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.stations` AS station
  INNER JOIN `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.gsod2015` AS weather
  ON station.usaf = weather.stn
  WHERE station.state = 'WA' AND station.usaf != '999999'
  GROUP BY station_id
)
SELECT washington_stations.name,
  (SELECT COUNT(*)
   FROM `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.gsod2015` AS weather
   WHERE washington_stations.station_id = weather.stn
   AND max >= 70) AS warm_days
FROM WashingtonStations AS washington_stations
ORDER BY warm_days DESC;

This query computes the names of weather stations in Washington state and the number of days in 2015 that the temperature reached 70 degrees Fahrenheit, or approximately 21 degrees Celsius. Notice that there is a subquery in the SELECT list, and that the subquery references washington_stations.station_id from the outer scope, namely FROM WashingtonStations AS washington_stations.

Arrays and structs

ARRAY and STRUCT are powerful concepts in GoogleSQL. As an example that uses both, consider the following query, which computes the top two articles for each day in the HackerNews dataset:

#standardSQL
WITH TitlesAndScores AS (
  SELECT
    ARRAY_AGG(STRUCT(title, score)) AS titles,
    EXTRACT(DATE FROM time_ts) AS date
  FROM `bigquery-public-data.hacker_news.stories`
  WHERE score IS NOT NULL AND title IS NOT NULL
  GROUP BY date)
SELECT date,
  ARRAY(SELECT AS STRUCT title, score
        FROM UNNEST(titles)
        ORDER BY score DESC
        LIMIT 2)
  AS top_articles
FROM TitlesAndScores
ORDER BY date DESC;

The WITH clause defines TitlesAndScores, which contains two columns. The first is an array of structs, where one field is an article title and the second is a score. The ARRAY_AGG expression returns an array of these structs for each day.

The SELECT statement following the WITH clause uses an ARRAY subquery to sort and return the top two articles within each array in accordance with the score, then returns the results in descending order by date.

For more information about arrays and ARRAY subqueries, see Working with arrays. See also the references for arrays and structs.## GoogleSQL highlights

This section discusses some of the highlights of GoogleSQL compared to legacy SQL.

Syntax differences

Escaping reserved keywords and invalid identifiers

In legacy SQL, you escape reserved keywords and identifiers that contain invalid characters such as a space or hyphen - using square brackets []. In GoogleSQL, you escape such keywords and identifiers using backticks `. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  word,
  SUM(word_count) AS word_count
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare`
WHERE word IN ('me', 'I', 'you')
GROUP BY word;

Legacy SQL allows reserved keywords in some places that GoogleSQL does not. For example, the following query fails due to a Syntax error using standard SQL:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  COUNT(*) AS rows
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare`;

To fix the error, escape the alias rows using backticks:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  COUNT(*) AS `rows`
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare`;

For a list of reserved keywords and what constitutes valid identifiers, see Lexical structure.

Project-qualified table names

In legacy SQL, to query a table with a project-qualified name, you use a colon, :, as a separator. For example:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  word
FROM
  [bigquery-public-data:samples.shakespeare]
LIMIT 1;

In GoogleSQL, you use a period, ., instead. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  word
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare`
LIMIT 1;

If your project name includes a domain, such as example.com:myproject, you use example.com:myproject as the project name, including the :.

Table decorators

GoogleSQL does not support table decorators. You can achieve the semantics of time decorators (formerly known as snapshot decorators) by using the FOR SYSTEM_TIME AS OF clause, which references the historical version of a table at a specified timestamp. For more information, see Accessing historical data using time travel.

There is no exact equivalent to range decorators in GoogleSQL. You can achieve similar semantics by creating a time-partitioned table and using a partition filter when querying data. For more information, see Querying partitioned tables. Another option is to create date-sharded tables and filter on the _TABLE_SUFFIX pseudocolumn. For more information, see Wildcard tables.

Wildcard functions

GoogleSQL does not support the TABLE_DATE_RANGE, TABLE_DATE_RANGE_STRICT, or TABLE_QUERY functions.

You can achieve the same semantics of TABLE_DATE_RANGE and TABLE_QUERY using a filter on the _TABLE_SUFFIX pseudocolumn. For example, consider the following legacy SQL query, which counts the number of rows across 2010 and 2011 in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration GSOD (global summary of the day) tables:

#legacySQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM TABLE_QUERY([bigquery-public-data:noaa_gsod],
                 'table_id IN ("gsod2010", "gsod2011")');

An equivalent query using GoogleSQL is:

#standardSQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.*`
WHERE _TABLE_SUFFIX IN ("gsod2010", "gsod2011");

For more information, including examples that use TABLE_DATE_RANGE, see Migrating legacy SQL table wildcard functions.

Comma operator with tables

In legacy SQL, the comma operator , has the non-standard meaning of UNION ALL when applied to tables. In GoogleSQL, the comma operator has the standard meaning of JOIN. For example, consider the following legacy SQL query:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  x,
  y
FROM
  (SELECT 1 AS x, "foo" AS y),
  (SELECT 2 AS x, "bar" AS y);

This is equivalent to the GoogleSQL query:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  x,
  y
FROM
  (SELECT 1 AS x, "foo" AS y UNION ALL
   SELECT 2 AS x, "bar" AS y);

Note also that in GoogleSQL, UNION ALL associates columns by position rather than by name. This query is equivalent to:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  x,
  y
FROM
  (SELECT 1 AS x, "foo" AS y UNION ALL
   SELECT 2, "bar");

A common usage of the comma operator in GoogleSQL is to JOIN with an array. For example:

#standardSQL
WITH T AS (
  SELECT 0 AS x, [1, 2, 3] AS arr UNION ALL
  SELECT 1, [4, 5])
SELECT
  x,
  y
FROM
  T,
  UNNEST(arr) AS y;

This returns the cross product of the table T with the elements of arr. You can also express the query in GoogleSQL as:

#standardSQL
WITH T AS (
  SELECT 0 AS x, [1, 2, 3] AS arr UNION ALL
  SELECT 1, [4, 5])
SELECT
  x,
  y
FROM
  T
JOIN
  UNNEST(arr) AS y;

In this query, JOIN has the same meaning as the , comma operator separating T and UNNEST(arr) AS y in the example above it.

Logical views

You cannot query a logical view defined with legacy SQL using GoogleSQL and vice versa due to differences in syntax and semantics between the dialects. Instead, you would need to create a new view that uses GoogleSQL--possibly under a different name--to replace a view that uses legacy SQL.

As an example, suppose that view V is defined using legacy SQL as:

#legacySQL
SELECT *, UTC_USEC_TO_DAY(timestamp_col) AS day
FROM MyTable;

Suppose that view W is defined using legacy SQL as:

#legacySQL
SELECT user, action, day
FROM V;

Suppose that you execute the following legacy SQL query daily, but you want to migrate it to use GoogleSQL instead:

#legacySQL
SELECT EXACT_COUNT_DISTINCT(user), action, day
FROM W
GROUP BY action, day;

One possible migration path is to create new views using different names. The steps involved are:

Create a view named V2 using GoogleSQL with the following contents:

#standardSQL
SELECT *, EXTRACT(DAY FROM timestamp_col) AS day
FROM MyTable;

Create a view named W2 using GoogleSQL with the following contents:

#standardSQL
SELECT user, action, day
FROM V2;

Change your query that executes daily to use GoogleSQL and refer to W2 instead:

#standardSQL
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT user), action, day
FROM W2
GROUP BY action, day;

Another option is to delete views V and W, then recreate them using standard SQL under the same names. With this option, you would need to migrate all of your queries that reference V or W to use GoogleSQL at the same time, however.

Function comparison

The following is a partial list of legacy SQL functions and their GoogleSQL equivalents.

Legacy SQL GoogleSQL Notes
INTEGER(x) SAFE_CAST(x AS INT64)
CAST(x AS INTEGER) SAFE_CAST(x AS INT64)
DATEDIFF(t1, t2) TIMESTAMP_DIFF(t1, t2, DAY)
NOW CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
STRFTIME_UTC_USEC(t, fmt) FORMAT_TIMESTAMP(fmt, t)
UTC_USEC_TO_DAY(t) TIMESTAMP_TRUNC(t, DAY)
UTC_USEC_TO_WEEK(t, day) TIMESTAMP_TRUNC(TIMESTAMP_MICROS(t), WEEK)
REGEXP_MATCH(s, pattern) REGEXP_CONTAINS(s, pattern)
IS_NULL(x) x IS NULL
LEFT(s, len) SUBSTR(s, 0, len)
RIGHT(s, len) SUBSTR(s, -len)
s CONTAINS "foo" STRPOS(s, "foo") > 0 or s LIKE '%foo%'
INSTR('str1', 'str2') STRPOS(s, "foo") > 0
x % y MOD(x, y)
NEST(x) ARRAY_AGG(x)
ANY(x) ANY_VALUE(x)
GROUP_CONCAT_UNQUOTED(s, sep) STRING_AGG(s, sep)
SOME(x) IFNULL(LOGICAL_OR(x), false)
EVERY(x) IFNULL(LOGICAL_AND(x), true)
COUNT(DISTINCT x) APPROX_COUNT_DISTINCT(x) see notes below
EXACT_COUNT_DISTINCT(x) COUNT(DISTINCT x) see notes below
QUANTILES(x, buckets + 1) APPROX_QUANTILES(x, buckets)
TOP(x, num), COUNT(*) APPROX_TOP_COUNT(x, num)
NTH(index, arr) WITHIN RECORD arr[SAFE_ORDINAL(index)]
COUNT(arr) WITHIN RECORD ARRAY_LENGTH(arr)
HOST(url) NET.HOST(url) see differences below
TLD(url) NET.PUBLIC_SUFFIX(url) see differences below
DOMAIN(url) NET.REG_DOMAIN(url) see differences below
PARSE_IP(addr_string) NET.IPV4_TO_INT64(NET.IP_FROM_STRING(addr_string))
FORMAT_IP(addr_int64) NET.IP_TO_STRING(NET.IPV4_FROM_INT64(addr_int64 & 0xFFFFFFFF))
PARSE_PACKED_IP(addr_string) NET.IP_FROM_STRING(addr_string)
FORMAT_PACKED_IP(addr_bytes) NET.IP_TO_STRING(addr_bytes)
NVL(expr, null_default) IFNULL(expr, null_default)

For more information about GoogleSQL functions, see Functions and operators.

COUNT function comparison

Both legacy SQL and GoogleSQL contain a COUNT function. However, each function behaves differently, depending on the SQL dialect you use.

In legacy SQL, COUNT(DISTINCT x) returns an approximate count. In standard SQL, it returns an exact count. For an approximate count of distinct values that runs faster and requires fewer resources, use APPROX_COUNT_DISTINCT.

URL function comparison

Both legacy SQL and GoogleSQL contain functions for parsing URLs. In legacy SQL, these functions are HOST(url), TLD(url), and DOMAIN(url). In standard SQL, these functions are NET.HOST(url), NET.PUBLIC_SUFFIX(url), and NET.REG_DOMAIN(url).

Improvements over legacy SQL functions

  • GoogleSQL URL functions can parse URLs starting with "//".
  • When the input is not compliant with RFC 3986 or is not a URL (for example, "mailto:?to=&subject=&body="), different rules are applied to parse the input. In particular, GoogleSQL URL functions can parse non-standard inputs without "//", such as "www.google.com". For best results, it is recommended that you ensure that inputs are URLs and comply with RFC 3986.
  • NET.PUBLIC_SUFFIX returns results without leading dots. For example, it returns "com" instead of ".com". This complies with the format in the public suffix list.
  • NET.PUBLIC_SUFFIX and NET.REG_DOMAIN support uppercase letters and internationalized domain names. TLD and DOMAIN do not support them (might return unexpected results).

Minor differences on edge cases

  • If the input does not contain any suffix in the public suffix list, NET.PUBLIC_SUFFIX and NET.REG_DOMAIN return NULL, while TLD and DOMAIN return non-NULL values as best effort guesses.
  • If the input contains only a public suffix without a preceding label (for example, "http://com"), NET.PUBLIC_SUFFIX returns the public suffix, while TLD returns an empty string. Similarly, NET.REG_DOMAIN returns NULL, while DOMAIN returns the public suffix.
  • For inputs with IPv6 hosts, NET.HOST does not remove brackets from the result, as specified by RFC 3986.
  • For inputs with IPv4 hosts, NET.REG_DOMAIN returns NULL, while DOMAIN returns the first 3 octets.

Examples

In the table below, gray text color indicates results that are the same between legacy and GoogleSQL.

URL (description) HOST NET.HOST TLD NET.PUBLIC _SUFFIX DOMAIN NET.REG_DOMAIN
"//google.com"
(starting with "//")
NULL "google.com" NULL "com" NULL "google.com"
"google.com"
(non-standard; no "//")
NULL "google.com" NULL "com" NULL "google.com"
"http://user:pass@word@x.com"
(non-standard with multiple "@")
"word@x.com" "x.com" ".com" "com" "word@x.com" "x.com"
"http://foo.com:1:2"
(non-standard with multiple ":")
"foo.com:1" "foo.com" ".com:1" "com" "foo.com" "foo.com"
"http://x.Co.uk"
(upper case letters)
"x.Co.uk" "x.Co.uk" ".uk" "Co.uk" "Co.uk" "x.Co.uk"
"http://a.b"
(public suffix not found)
"a.b" "a.b" ".b" NULL "a.b" NULL
"http://com"
(host contains only a public suffix)
"com" "com" "" "com" "com" NULL
"http://[::1]"
(IPv6 host; no public suffix)
"::1" "[::1]" "" NULL "::1" NULL
"http://1.2.3.4"
(IPv4 host; no public suffix)
"1.2.3.4" "1.2.3.4" "" NULL "1.2.3" NULL

Differences in repeated field handling

A REPEATED type in legacy SQL is equivalent to an ARRAY of that type in GoogleSQL. For example, REPEATED INTEGER is equivalent to ARRAY<INT64> in GoogleSQL. The following section discusses some of the differences in operations on repeated fields between legacy and GoogleSQL.

NULL elements and NULL arrays

GoogleSQL supports NULL array elements, but raises an error if there is a NULL array element in the query result. If there is a NULL array column in the query result, GoogleSQL stores it as an empty array.

Selecting nested repeated leaf fields

Using legacy SQL, you can "dot" into a nested repeated field without needing to consider where the repetition occurs. In GoogleSQL, attempting to "dot" into a nested repeated field results in an error. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  payload.pages.page_name
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
LIMIT 5;

Attempting to execute this query returns:

Cannot access field page_name on a value with type
ARRAY<STRUCT<action STRING, html_url STRING, page_name STRING, ...>>

To correct the error and return an array of page_names in the result, use an ARRAY subquery instead. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  ARRAY(SELECT page_name FROM UNNEST(payload.pages)) AS page_names
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
LIMIT 5;

For more information about arrays and ARRAY subqueries, see Working with arrays.

Filtering repeated fields

Using legacy SQL, you can filter repeated fields directly using a WHERE clause. In GoogleSQL, you can express similar logic with a JOIN comma operator followed by a filter. For example, consider the following legacy SQL query:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  payload.pages.title
FROM
  [bigquery-public-data:samples.github_nested]
WHERE payload.pages.page_name IN ('db_jobskill', 'Profession');

This query returns all titles of pages for which the page_name is either db_jobskill or Profession. You can express a similar query in GoogleSQL as:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  page.title
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`,
  UNNEST(payload.pages) AS page
WHERE page.page_name IN ('db_jobskill', 'Profession');

One difference between the preceding legacy SQL and GoogleSQL queries is that if you unset the Flatten Results option and execute the legacy SQL query, payload.pages.title is REPEATED in the query result. To achieve the same semantics in GoogleSQL and return an array for the title column, use an ARRAY subquery instead:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  title
FROM (
  SELECT
    ARRAY(SELECT title FROM UNNEST(payload.pages)
          WHERE page_name IN ('db_jobskill', 'Profession')) AS title
  FROM
    `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`)
WHERE ARRAY_LENGTH(title) > 0;

This query creates an array of titles where the page_name is either 'db_jobskill' or 'Profession', then filters any rows where the array did not match that condition using ARRAY_LENGTH(title) > 0.

For more information about arrays, see Working with arrays.

Structure of selected nested leaf fields

Legacy SQL preserves the structure of nested leaf fields in the SELECT list when the Flatten Results option is unset, whereas GoogleSQL does not. For example, consider the following legacy SQL query:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  repository.has_downloads
FROM
  [bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested]
LIMIT 5;

This query returns url and has_downloads within a record named repository when Flatten Results is unset. Now consider the following GoogleSQL query:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  repository.has_downloads
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
LIMIT 5;

This query returns url and has_downloads as top-level columns; they are not part of a repository record or struct. To return them as part of a struct, use the STRUCT operator:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  STRUCT(
    repository.url,
    repository.has_downloads) AS repository
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
LIMIT 5;

Removing repetition with FLATTEN

GoogleSQL does not have a FLATTEN function as in legacy SQL, but you can achieve similar semantics using the JOIN (comma) operator. For example, consider the following legacy SQL query:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  payload.pages.page_name
FROM
  FLATTEN([bigquery-public-data:samples.github_nested], payload.pages.page_name)
LIMIT 5;

You can express a similar query in GoogleSQL as follows:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  page.page_name
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`,
  UNNEST(payload.pages) AS page
LIMIT 5;

Or, equivalently, use JOIN rather than the comma , operator:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  page.page_name
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
JOIN
  UNNEST(payload.pages) AS page
LIMIT 5;

One important difference is that the legacy SQL query returns a row where payload.pages.page_name is NULL if payload.pages is empty. The standard SQL query, however, does not return a row if payload.pages is empty. To achieve exactly the same semantics, use a LEFT JOIN or LEFT OUTER JOIN. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  page.page_name
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
LEFT JOIN
  UNNEST(payload.pages) AS page
LIMIT 5;

For more information about arrays, see Working with arrays. For more information about UNNEST, see the UNNEST topic.

Filtering rows with OMIT RECORD IF

The OMIT IF clause from legacy SQL lets you filter rows based on a condition that can apply to repeated fields. In GoogleSQL, you can model an OMIT IF clause with an EXISTS clause, IN clause, or simple filter. For example, consider the following legacy SQL query:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
FROM
  [bigquery-public-data:samples.github_nested]
OMIT RECORD IF
  EVERY(payload.pages.page_name != 'db_jobskill'
        AND payload.pages.page_name != 'Profession');

The analogous GoogleSQL query is:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
WHERE EXISTS (
  SELECT 1 FROM UNNEST(payload.pages)
  WHERE page_name = 'db_jobskill'
    OR page_name = 'Profession');

Here the EXISTS clause evaluates to true if there is at least one element of payload.pages where the page name is 'db_jobskill' or 'Profession'.

Alternatively, suppose that the legacy SQL query uses IN:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
FROM
  [bigquery-public-data:samples.github_nested]
OMIT RECORD IF NOT
  SOME(payload.pages.page_name IN ('db_jobskill', 'Profession'));

In GoogleSQL, you can express the query using an EXISTS clause with IN:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
WHERE EXISTS (
  SELECT 1 FROM UNNEST(payload.pages)
  WHERE page_name IN ('db_jobskill', 'Profession'));

Consider the following legacy SQL query that filters records with 80 or fewer pages:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
FROM
  [bigquery-public-data:samples.github_nested]
OMIT RECORD IF
  COUNT(payload.pages.page_name) <= 80;

In this case, you can use a filter with ARRAY_LENGTH in GoogleSQL:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
WHERE
  ARRAY_LENGTH(payload.pages) > 80;

Note that the ARRAY_LENGTH function applies to the repeated payload.pages field directly rather than the nested field payload.pages.page_name as in the legacy SQL query.

For more information about arrays and ARRAY subqueries, see Working with arrays.

Semantic differences

The semantics of some operations differ between legacy and GoogleSQL.

Automatic data type coercions

Both legacy and GoogleSQL support coercions (automatic conversions) between certain data types. For example, BigQuery coerces a value of type INT64 to FLOAT64 if the query passes it to a function that requires FLOAT64 as input. GoogleSQL does not support the following coercions that legacy SQL supports. Instead, you must use an explicit CAST.

  • INT64 literal to TIMESTAMP. Instead, use TIMESTAMP_MICROS(micros_value).
  • STRING literal to INT64, FLOAT64, or BOOL. Instead, use CAST(str AS INT64), CAST(str AS FLOAT64), or CAST(str AS BOOL).
  • STRING to BYTES. Instead, use CAST(str AS BYTES).

Runtime errors

Some functions in legacy SQL return NULL for invalid input, potentially masking problems in queries or in data. GoogleSQL is generally more strict, and raises an error if an input is invalid.

  • For all mathematical functions and operators, legacy SQL does not check for overflows. GoogleSQL adds overflow checks, and raises an error if a computation overflows. This includes the +, -, * operators, the SUM, AVG, and STDDEV aggregate functions, and others.
  • GoogleSQL raises an error upon division by zero, whereas legacy SQL returns NULL. To return NULL for division by zero in GoogleSQL, use SAFE_DIVIDE.
  • GoogleSQL raises an error for CASTs where the input format is invalid or out of range for the target type, whereas legacy SQL returns NULL. To avoid raising an error for an invalid cast in GoogleSQL, use SAFE_CAST.

Nested repeated results

Queries executed using GoogleSQL preserve any nesting and repetition of the columns in the result, and the Flatten Results option has no effect. To return top-level columns for nested fields, use the .* operator on struct columns. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.*
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
LIMIT 5;

To return top-level columns for repeated nested fields (ARRAYs of STRUCTs), use a JOIN to take the cross product of the table's rows and the elements of the repeated nested field. For example:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  repository.url,
  page.*
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
JOIN
  UNNEST(payload.pages) AS page
LIMIT 5;

For more information about arrays and ARRAY subqueries, see Working with arrays.

NOT IN conditions and NULL

Legacy SQL does not comply with the SQL standard in its handling of NULL with NOT IN conditions, whereas GoogleSQL does. Consider the following legacy SQL query, which finds the number of words that don't appear in the GitHub sample table as locations:

#legacySQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM [bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare]
WHERE word NOT IN (
  SELECT actor_attributes.location
  FROM [bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested]
);

This query returns 163,716 as the count, indicating that there are 163,716 words that don't appear as locations in the GitHub table. Now consider the following GoogleSQL query:

#standardSQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare`
WHERE word NOT IN (
  SELECT actor_attributes.location
  FROM `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
);

This query returns 0 as the count. The difference is due to the semantics of NOT IN with GoogleSQL, which returns NULL if any value on the right hand side is NULL. To achieve the same results as with the legacy SQL query, use a WHERE clause to exclude the NULL values:

#standardSQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare`
WHERE word NOT IN (
  SELECT actor_attributes.location
  FROM `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
  WHERE actor_attributes.location IS NOT NULL
);

This query returns 163,716 as the count. Alternatively, use a NOT EXISTS condition:

#standardSQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare` AS t
WHERE NOT EXISTS (
  SELECT 1
  FROM `bigquery-public-data.samples.github_nested`
  WHERE t.word = actor_attributes.location
);

This query also returns 163,716 as the count. For further reading, see the comparison operators section of the documentation, which explains the semantics of IN, NOT IN, EXISTS, and other comparison operators.

Differences in user-defined JavaScript functions

The User-defined functions topic documents how to use JavaScript user-defined functions with GoogleSQL. This section explains some of the key differences between user-defined functions in legacy and GoogleSQL.

Functions in the query text

With GoogleSQL, you use CREATE TEMPORARY FUNCTION as part of the query body rather than specifying user-defined functions separately. Examples of defining functions separately include using the UDF Editor in the Google Cloud console or using the --udf_resource flag in the bq command-line tool.

Consider the following GoogleSQL query:

#standardSQL
-- Computes the harmonic mean of the elements in 'arr'.
-- The harmonic mean of x_1, x_2, ..., x_n can be expressed as:
--   n / ((1 / x_1) + (1 / x_2) + ... + (1 / x_n))
CREATE TEMPORARY FUNCTION HarmonicMean(arr ARRAY<FLOAT64>)
  RETURNS FLOAT64 LANGUAGE js AS """
var sum_of_reciprocals = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; ++i) {
  sum_of_reciprocals += 1 / arr[i];
}
return arr.length / sum_of_reciprocals;
""";

WITH T AS (
  SELECT GENERATE_ARRAY(1.0, x * 4, x) AS arr
  FROM UNNEST([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) AS x
)
SELECT arr, HarmonicMean(arr) AS h_mean
FROM T;

This query defines a JavaScript function named HarmonicMean and then applies it to the array column arr from T.

For more information about user-defined functions, see the User-defined functions topic.

Functions operate on values rather than rows

In legacy SQL, JavaScript functions operate on rows from a table. In standard SQL, as in the example above, JavaScript functions operate on values. To pass a row value to a JavaScript function using GoogleSQL, define a function that takes a struct of the same row type as the table. For example:

#standardSQL
-- Takes a struct of x, y, and z and returns a struct with a new field foo.
CREATE TEMPORARY FUNCTION AddField(s STRUCT<x FLOAT64, y BOOL, z STRING>)
  RETURNS STRUCT<x FLOAT64, y BOOL, z STRING, foo STRING> LANGUAGE js AS """
var new_struct = new Object();
new_struct.x = s.x;
new_struct.y = s.y;
new_struct.z = s.z;
if (s.y) {
  new_struct.foo = 'bar';
} else {
  new_struct.foo = 'baz';
}

return new_struct;
""";

WITH T AS (
  SELECT x, MOD(off, 2) = 0 AS y, CAST(x AS STRING) AS z
  FROM UNNEST([5.0, 4.0, 3.0, 2.0, 1.0]) AS x WITH OFFSET off
)
SELECT AddField(t).*
FROM T AS t;

This query defines a JavaScript function that takes a struct with the same row type as T and creates a new struct with an additional field named foo. The SELECT statement passes the row t as input to the function and uses .* to return the fields of the resulting struct in the output.

Migrating legacy SQL table wildcard functions

In legacy SQL, you can use the following table wildcard functions to query multiple tables.

  • TABLE_DATE_RANGE() and TABLE_DATE_RANGE_STRICT()
  • TABLE_QUERY()

The TABLE_DATE_RANGE() functions

The legacy SQL TABLE_DATE_RANGE() functions work on tables that conform to a specific naming scheme: <prefix>YYYYMMDD, where the <prefix> represents the first part of a table name and YYYYMMDD represents the date associated with that table's data.

For example, the following legacy SQL query finds the average temperature from a set of daily tables that contain Seattle area weather data:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  ROUND(AVG(TemperatureF),1) AS AVG_TEMP_F
FROM
  TABLE_DATE_RANGE([mydataset.sea_weather_],
                    TIMESTAMP("2016-05-01"),
                    TIMESTAMP("2016-05-09"))

In GoogleSQL, an equivalent query uses a table wildcard and the BETWEEN clause.

#standardSQL
SELECT
  ROUND(AVG(TemperatureF),1) AS AVG_TEMP_F
FROM
  `mydataset.sea_weather_*`
WHERE
  _TABLE_SUFFIX BETWEEN '20160501' AND '20160509'

The TABLE_QUERY() function

The legacy SQL TABLE_QUERY() function enables you to find table names based on patterns. When migrating a TABLE_QUERY() function to GoogleSQL, which does not support the TABLE_QUERY() function, you can instead filter using the _TABLE_SUFFIX pseudo column. Keep the following differences in mind when migrating:

  • In legacy SQL, you place the TABLE_QUERY() function in the FROM clause, whereas in GoogleSQL, you filter using the _TABLE_SUFFIX pseudo column in the WHERE clause.

  • In legacy SQL, the TABLE_QUERY() function operates on the entire table name (or table_id), whereas in GoogleSQL, the _TABLE_SUFFIX pseudo column contains part or all of the table name, depending on how you use the wildcard character.

Filter in the WHERE clause

When migrating from legacy SQL to GoogleSQL, move the filter to the WHERE clause. For example, the following query finds the maximum temperatures across all years that end in the number 0:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  max,
  ROUND((max-32)*5/9,1) celsius,
  year
FROM
  TABLE_QUERY([bigquery-public-data:noaa_gsod],
               'REGEXP_MATCH(table_id, r"0$")')
WHERE
  max != 9999.9 # code for missing data
  AND max > 100 # to improve ORDER BY performance
ORDER BY
  max DESC

In GoogleSQL, an equivalent query uses a table wildcard and places the regular expression function, REGEXP_CONTAINS(), in the WHERE clause:

#standardSQL
SELECT
  max,
  ROUND((max-32)*5/9,1) celsius,
  year
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.gsod*`
WHERE
  max != 9999.9 # code for missing data
  AND max > 100 # to improve ORDER BY performance
  AND REGEXP_CONTAINS(_TABLE_SUFFIX, r"0$")
ORDER BY
  max DESC

Differences between table_id and _TABLE_SUFFIX

In the legacy SQL TABLE_QUERY(dataset, expr) function, the second parameter is an expression that operates over the entire table name, using the value table_id. When migrating to GoogleSQL, the filter that you create in the WHERE clause operates on the value of _TABLE_SUFFIX, which can include part or all of the table name, depending on your use of the wildcard character.

For example, the following legacy SQL query uses the entire table name in a regular expression to find the maximum temperatures across all years that end in the number 0:

#legacySQL
SELECT
  max,
  ROUND((max-32)*5/9,1) celsius,
  year
FROM
  TABLE_QUERY([bigquery-public-data:noaa_gsod],
               'REGEXP_MATCH(table_id, r"gsod\d{3}0")')
WHERE
  max != 9999.9 # code for missing data
  AND max > 100 # to improve ORDER BY performance
ORDER BY
  max DESC

In GoogleSQL, an equivalent query can use the entire table name or only a part of the table name. You can use an empty prefix in GoogleSQL so that your filter operates over the entire table name:

# Empty prefix
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.*`

However, longer prefixes perform better than empty prefixes, so the following example uses a longer prefix, which means that the value of _TABLE_SUFFIX is only part of the table name.

#standardSQL
SELECT
  max,
  ROUND((max-32)*5/9,1) celsius,
  year
FROM
  `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.gsod*`
WHERE
  max != 9999.9 # code for missing data
  AND max > 100 # to improve ORDER BY performance
  AND REGEXP_CONTAINS(_TABLE_SUFFIX, r"\d{3}0")
ORDER BY
  max DESC