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Functions
The SQL language supports all SQL plugin common functions, including relevance search, but also introduces a few function synonyms, which are available in SQL only. These synonyms are provided by the V1
engine. For more information, see Limitations.
Match query
The MATCHQUERY
and MATCH_QUERY
functions are synonyms for the MATCH
relevance function. They don’t accept additional arguments but provide an alternate syntax.
Syntax
To use matchquery
or match_query
, pass in your search query and the field name that you want to search against:
match_query(field_expression, query_expression[, option=<option_value>]*)
matchquery(field_expression, query_expression[, option=<option_value>]*)
field_expression = match_query(query_expression[, option=<option_value>]*)
field_expression = matchquery(query_expression[, option=<option_value>]*)
You can specify the following options in any order:
analyzer
boost
Example
You can use MATCHQUERY
to replace MATCH
:
SELECT account_number, address
FROM accounts
WHERE MATCHQUERY(address, 'Holmes')
Alternatively, you can use MATCH_QUERY
to replace MATCH
:
SELECT account_number, address
FROM accounts
WHERE address = MATCH_QUERY('Holmes')
The results contain documents in which the address contains “Holmes”:
account_number | address |
---|---|
1 | 880 Holmes Lane |
Multi-match
There are three synonyms for MULTI_MATCH
, each with a slightly different syntax. They accept a query string and a fields list with weights. They can also accept additional optional parameters.
Syntax
multimatch('query'=query_expression[, 'fields'=field_expression][, option=<option_value>]*)
multi_match('query'=query_expression[, 'fields'=field_expression][, option=<option_value>]*)
multimatchquery('query'=query_expression[, 'fields'=field_expression][, option=<option_value>]*)
The fields
parameter is optional and can contain a single field or a comma-separated list (whitespace characters are not allowed). The weight for each field is optional and is specified after the field name. It should be delimited by the caret
character – ^
– without whitespace.
Example
The following queries show the fields
parameter of a multi-match query with a single field and a field list:
multi_match('fields' = "Tags^2,Title^3.4,Body,Comments^0.3", ...)
multi_match('fields' = "Title", ...)
You can specify the following options in any order:
analyzer
boost
slop
type
tie_breaker
operator
Query string
The QUERY
function is a synonym for QUERY_STRING
.
Syntax
query('query'=query_expression[, 'fields'=field_expression][, option=<option_value>]*)
The fields
parameter is optional and can contain a single field or a comma-separated list (whitespace characters are not allowed). The weight for each field is optional and is specified after the field name. It should be delimited by the caret
character – ^
– without whitespace.
Example
The following queries show the fields
parameter of a multi-match query with a single field and a field list:
query('fields' = "Tags^2,Title^3.4,Body,Comments^0.3", ...)
query('fields' = "Tags", ...)
You can specify the following options in any order:
analyzer
boost
slop
default_field
Example of using query_string
in SQL and PPL queries:
The following is a sample REST API search request in OpenSearch DSL.
GET accounts/_search
{
"query": {
"query_string": {
"query": "Lane Street",
"fields": [ "address" ],
}
}
}
The request above is equivalent to the following query
function:
SELECT account_number, address
FROM accounts
WHERE query('address:Lane OR address:Street')
The results contain addresses that contain “Lane” or “Street”:
account_number | address |
---|---|
1 | 880 Holmes Lane |
6 | 671 Bristol Street |
13 | 789 Madison Street |
Match phrase
The MATCHPHRASEQUERY
function is a synonym for MATCH_PHRASE
.
Syntax
matchphrasequery(query_expression, field_expression[, option=<option_value>]*)
You can specify the following options in any order:
analyzer
boost
slop
Score query
To return a relevance score along with every matching document, use the SCORE
, SCOREQUERY
, or SCORE_QUERY
functions.
Syntax
The SCORE
function expects two arguments. The first argument is the MATCH_QUERY
expression. The second argument is an optional floating-point number to boost the score (the default value is 1.0):
SCORE(match_query_expression, score)
SCOREQUERY(match_query_expression, score)
SCORE_QUERY(match_query_expression, score)
Example
The following example uses the SCORE
function to boost the documents’ scores:
SELECT account_number, address, _score
FROM accounts
WHERE SCORE(MATCH_QUERY(address, 'Lane'), 0.5) OR
SCORE(MATCH_QUERY(address, 'Street'), 100)
ORDER BY _score
The results contain matches with corresponding scores:
account_number | address | score |
---|---|---|
1 | 880 Holmes Lane | 0.5 |
6 | 671 Bristol Street | 100 |
13 | 789 Madison Street | 100 |
Wildcard query
To search documents by a given wildcard, use the WILDCARDQUERY
or WILDCARD_QUERY
functions.
Syntax
wildcardquery(field_expression, query_expression[, boost=<value>])
wildcard_query(field_expression, query_expression[, boost=<value>])
Example
The following example uses a wildcard query:
SELECT account_number, address
FROM accounts
WHERE wildcard_query(address, '*Holmes*');
The results contain documents that match the wildcard expression:
account_number | address |
---|---|
1 | 880 Holmes Lane |