Window functions provide the ability to perform calculations across sets of rows that are related to the current query row. See Section 3.5, “Window Functions” for an introduction to this feature, and Section 4.2.8, “Window Function Calls” for syntax details.
The built-in window functions are listed in
Table 9.56, “General-Purpose Window Functions”. Note that these functions
must be invoked using window function syntax; that is an
OVER clause is required.
In addition to these functions, any built-in or user-defined normal
aggregate function (but not ordered-set or hypothetical-set aggregates)
can be used as a window function; see
Section 9.20, “Aggregate Functions” for a list of the built-in aggregates.
Aggregate functions act as window functions only when an OVER
clause follows the call; otherwise they act as regular aggregates.
Table 9.56. General-Purpose Window Functions
All of the functions listed in
Table 9.56, “General-Purpose Window Functions” depend on the sort ordering
specified by the ORDER BY clause of the associated window
definition. Rows that are not distinct in the ORDER BY
ordering are said to be peers; the four ranking functions
are defined so that they give the same answer for any two peer rows.
Note that first_value, last_value, and
nth_value consider only the rows within the “window
frame”, which by default contains the rows from the start of the
partition through the last peer of the current row. This is
likely to give unhelpful results for last_value and
sometimes also nth_value. You can redefine the frame by
adding a suitable frame specification (RANGE or
ROWS) to the OVER clause.
See Section 4.2.8, “Window Function Calls” for more information
about frame specifications.
When an aggregate function is used as a window function, it aggregates
over the rows within the current row's window frame.
An aggregate used with ORDER BY and the default window frame
definition produces a “running sum” type of behavior, which may or
may not be what's wanted. To obtain
aggregation over the whole partition, omit ORDER BY or use
ROWS BETWEEN UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING.
Other frame specifications can be used to obtain other effects.
The SQL standard defines a RESPECT NULLS or
IGNORE NULLS option for lead, lag,
first_value, last_value, and
nth_value. This is not implemented in
PostgreSQL: the behavior is always the
same as the standard's default, namely RESPECT NULLS.
Likewise, the standard's FROM FIRST or FROM LAST
option for nth_value is not implemented: only the
default FROM FIRST behavior is supported. (You can achieve
the result of FROM LAST by reversing the ORDER BY
ordering.)