Usage
view: view_name { filter: filter_name { ... } }
Hierarchy
filter |
Default Value
None
Accepts
A Looker identifier to name the filter
Special Rules
Filter names may not be shared with any other filter, dimension , or measure within the same view
|
Definition
The filter
parameter declares a filter-only field and a name for that filter. A user can add filter-only fields as filters when exploring, but they cannot add them to their result set. These filter-only fields are made useful via templated filters, which are an advanced LookML topic. You can also refer to the Using filter
to filter by a hidden field example.
The filter name must:
- Be unique within any given view
- Consist of characters
a
throughz
(no capital letters),0
through9
, or_
- Start with a letter
There are many types of filter fields, as discussed further on the Dimension, filter, and parameter types documentation page.
Examples
Here are some examples for using the filter
parameter.
Creating a user-specified filter
Create a filter that lets the user specify the order_region
:
filter: order_region {
type: string
}
Defining a dynamic derived table with a templated filter
As shown on the Templated filters and Liquid parameters documentation page, define a derived table to calculate the lifetime spending for customers in a region that is specified by the user. This example uses the filter
created in the previous example as part of a templated filter. The filter
input is used in the WHERE
clause with Liquid variables:
view: customer_facts {
derived_table: {
sql:
SELECT
customer_id,
SUM(sale_price) AS lifetime_spend
FROM
order
WHERE
{% condition order_region %} order.region {% endcondition %}
GROUP BY 1
;;
}
filter: order_region {
type: string
}
}
Using the sql
parameter with filter
You can also use the sql
parameter with filter
, which applies to the SQL WHERE
clause whenever the filter has a value. This allows for a dynamic WHERE
clause, based on the user filter input.
The following example creates a filter that allows only user names that exist in the dataset:
filter: user_enabled {
type: string
suggest_dimension: user_name
sql: EXISTS (SELECT user_id FROM users WHERE {% condition %} user_name {% endcondition %} and state = 'enabled') ;;
}
In the preceding example, if the complete list of user names in the dataset is "Zach", "Erin", and "Brett", the filter results in the following WHERE
clause:
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT user_id FROM users WHERE user_name in ('Zach', 'Erin', 'Brett') and state = 'enabled')
See the Using filter
to filter by a hidden field section on this page for an example of how to use the sql
parameter with filter
.
Using filter
to define a dynamic derived table and a user-defined filter
Using the earlier example that defines a derived table with a dynamic region value, you can use the sql
parameter with a templated filter to dynamically build a WHERE
clause that applies to both the derived table and the main Looker-generated query:
view: customer_facts {
derived_table: {
sql:
SELECT
customer_id,
SUM(sale_price) AS lifetime_spend
FROM
order
WHERE
{% condition order_region %} order.region {% endcondition %}
GROUP BY 1
;;
}
filter: order_region {
type: string
sql: {% condition order_region %} ${region} {% endcondition %} ;;
}
dimension: region {
type: string
sql: ${TABLE}.region ;;
}
In the preceding example, the user provides input to the filter order_region
, which in turn provides the value to the region
dimension. The region
dimension then provides the value of the WHERE
clause in the derived table SQL and, because of the sql
parameter in the filter
definition, the value for the WHERE
clause in a Looker-generated query.
Using filter
to filter by a hidden field
You can use filter
to create a dimension that users can filter on, while also preventing users from selecting the dimension in a query.
First, hide the dimension in question using
hidden: yes
. This means that the dimension will not be available for users to select from an Explore field picker.dimension: field_to_hide { type: string hidden: yes sql: ${TABLE}.field_to_hide ;; }
Now, make a
filter
field to link to thefield_to_hide
dimension.filter: filter_on_field_to_hide { type: string sql: {% condition filter_on_field_to_hide %} ${field_to_hide} {% endcondition %} ;; }
As discussed in the Using the sql
parameter with filter
example, the sql
parameter of the filter
field applies SQL directly to the WHERE
clause of the query. In this case, the sql
takes the filter condition specified in the filter_on_field_to_hide
filter and applies it to the ${field_to_hide}
dimension.
This way, users can filter a query by field_to_hide
with the filter_on_field_to_hide
filter, while the field_to_hide
dimension remains hidden.