Oracle9i OLAP Developer's Guide to the OLAP DML Release 2 (9.2) Part Number A95298-01 |
|
Working with Expressions, 4 of 11
A qualified data reference (QDR) is a way of limiting one or more dimensions of an expression to a single value. QDRs are useful when you want to specify a single value without changing the current status. Using a QDR, you can qualify a dimension (which allows you to specify one dimension value in an expression) or one or more dimensions of a variable or relation.
A qualified data reference takes the following form.
expression(dimname1 dimexp1 [, dimname2 dimexp2. . .])
The dimname
argument is the name of one of the dimensions, or a dimension surrogate of the dimension, of the expression and the dimexp
argument is one of the following:
dimname
.dimname
.dimname
.dimname
.
You can qualify any or all of a dimensions of a variable using either of the following techniques:
For example, the variable sales
has three dimensions, month
, product
, and district
. You might want to compare total sales in Boston to the total sales in all cities. In a single command, you want district
to be limited to two different values:
district
to be BOSTON
.district
to be ALL
.The command below lets you calculate this result by using a QDR.
SHOW sales(district 'BOSTON')/TOTAL(sales)
You can qualify more than one of the dimensions of a variable. For example, if you qualify all the dimensions of the sales
variable by specifying one dimension value of each dimension, then you narrow sales
down to a single-cell value.
To fetch sales for JUN02
, TENTS
, and SEATTLE
, use the following QDR.
SHOW sales(month 'JUN02', product 'TENTS', district 'SEATTLE')
This command fetches a single value.
You can use a qualified data reference with the target expression of the =
command. This lets you assign a value to a specific cell in a data object.
The following example assigns the value 10200 to the data cell of the sales
composite that is specified in the qualified data reference. If the composite named sales
does not already have a value for the combination BOSTON
and TENTS
, then this value combination is added to the composite, thus adding the data cell.
sales(market 'BOSTON' product 'TENTS' month 'JAN99')= 10200
When you use a relation as the qualifier in the QDR, you replace a dimension of the variable with the dimension or dimensions of the relation. The relation must be related to the dimension that you are qualifying, and it must be dimensioned by the replacement dimension.
Suppose you have two variables, sales
and quota
, which are dimensioned by month
, product
, and district
. A third variable, division
.mgr
, is dimensioned by month
and division
. You also have a relation between division
and product
, called division
.product
. These objects have the following definitions.
DEFINE SALES VARIABLE DECIMAL <MONTH PRODUCT DISTRICT> LD Sales Revenue DEFINE QUOTA VARIABLE DECIMAL <MONTH PRODUCT DISTRICT> DEFINE DIVISION.MGR VARIABLE TEXT <MONTH DIVISION> DEFINE DIVISION.PRODUCT RELATION DIVISION <PRODUCT> LD DIVISION for each PRODUCT
The command below produces the report following it.
REPORT division.mgr -------------------DIVISION.MGR---------------------- ----------------------MONTH-------------------------- DIVISION JAN02 FEB02 MAR02 APR02 MAY02 JUN02 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- CAMPING Hawley Hawley Jones Jones Jones Jones SPORTING Carey Carey Carey Carey Carey Musgrave CLOTHING Musgrave Musgrave Musgrave Musgrave Musgrave Wong
Suppose you want to obtain a report that shows the fraction by which sales have exceeded quota; and you want to include the appropriate division manager for each product. You can show the division manager for each product by using the relation division
.product
, which is related to division
and dimensioned by product
, as the qualifier. The QDR replaces the division
dimension with product
, so that it has the same dimensions as the other expression in the report "sales
/ quota
." The command below produces the report following it.
REPORT DOWN month sales W 6 sales/quota W 8 HEADING - 'MANAGER' division.mgr(division division.product) DISTRICT: BOSTON -----------------------------PRODUCT------------------------------------ ----TENTS---- ---CANOES---- --RACQUETS--- --SPORTSWEAR-- ---FOOTWEAR--- SALES/ SALES/ SALES/ SALES/ SALES/ MONTH QUOTA MANAGER QUOTA MANAGER QUOTA MANAGER QUOTA MANAGER QUOTA MANAGER ------ ----- ------- ----- ------- ----- ------- ----- -------- ----- -------- JAN02 1.00 Hawley 0.82 Hawley 1.02 Carey 0.91 Musgrave 0.92 Musgrave FEB02 0.84 Hawley 0.96 Hawley 1.00 Carey 0.80 Musgrave 1.07 Musgrave MAR02 0.87 Jones 0.95 Jones 0.87 Carey 0.88 Musgrave 0.91 Musgrave APR02 0.91 Jones 0.93 Jones 0.99 Carey 0.94 Musgrave 0.95 Musgrave . . .
You can also use a QDR to qualify a relation (which is really a special kind of variable).
Suppose the region
.district
relation is dimensioned by district
. If you qualify district
with the value SEATTLE
, then the value of the expression is the value of the relation for SEATTLE
. Because the QDR specifies one value of district
, the expression has a single-cell result.
The definition of region
.district
is as follows.
DEFINE REGION.DISTRICT RELATION REGION <DISTRICT> LD The region for each district
The command below displays the value WEST
.
SHOW region.district(district 'SEATTLE')
You can use a QDR to qualify the dimension itself, which allows you to specify one dimension value in an expression. The following expression specifies one value of district
, the one contained in the single-cell variable mydistrict
.
district(district mydistrict)
For a concat dimension, you can use a QDR to qualify the dimension by specifying a value from one of the base dimensions of the concat dimension. The following expression specifies one value of reg.dist.ccdim
, a concat dimension that has region
and district
as its base dimensions. The costs variable is dimensioned by the division
and reg.dist.ccdim
dimensions.
show reg.dist.ccdim(district 'BOSTON')
The preceding expression produces the following result.
<DISTRICT: BOSTON>
An ampersand character (&
) at the beginning of an expression substitutes the value of the expression for the expression itself in a command or function.When you use an ampersand with a QDR, you must enclose the whole expression in parentheses if you want the variable to be qualified before the substitution is made.
Suppose you have a text variable named myvar
that is dimensioned by reptype
and that contains the names of variables. Remember that it is myvar
that is dimensioned by reptype
, not the variables named by myvar
. Therefore, you must use parentheses so that myvar
is qualified and the resulting value is used in the REPORT
command.
REPORT &(myvar(reptype 'ACTUAL'))
If you do not use parentheses and the variable that is specified in myvar
is sales
, then you will get an error message that sales
is not dimensioned by reptype
.
Sometimes you will find that the syntax of a QDR is ambiguous and could either be misinterpreted or cause a syntax error. In this case, you can use the QUAL
function to explicitly specify a qualified data reference (QDR).
The following example first shows how you might view your data by limiting its dimensions, and then how you might view it by using QUAL
.
These commands produce the report shown below them.
LIMIT month TO 'JAN96' TO 'JUN96' LIMIT line TO 'COGS' LIMIT division TO 'SPORTING' REPORT DOWN month W 11 MAX(actual,budget) W 11 actual W 11 budget DIVISION: SPORTING ---------------LINE---------------- ---------------COGS---------------- MAX(ACTUAL, MONTH BUDGET) ACTUAL BUDGET -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- JAN96 287,557.87 287,557.87 279,773.01 FEB96 323,981.56 315,298.82 323,981.56 MAR96 326,184.87 326,184.87 302,177.88 APR96 394,544.27 394,544.27 386,100.82 MAY96 449,862.25 449,862.25 433,997.89 JUN96 457,347.55 457,347.55 448,042.45
Now consider how you might view the same figures for MAX(actual,budget)
without changing the status of line
or division
.
ALLSTAT LIMIT month TO 'JAN96' TO 'JUN96' REPORT HEADING 'For Cogs in Sporting Division' DOWN month - W 11 HEADING 'MAX(actual,budget)'- QUAL(MAX(actual,budget), line 'COGS', division 'SPORTING') For Cogs in Sporting MAX(ACTUAL, Division BUDGET) -------------- ----------- JAN96 287,557.87 FEB96 323,981.56 MAR96 326,184.87 APR96 394,544.27 MAY96 449,862.25 JUN96 457,347.55
If you attempt to produce the same report with standard QDR syntax, then an error is signalled.
REPORT HEADING 'For Cogs in Sporting Division' DOWN month - W 11 HEADING 'MAX(actual,budget)'- MAX(actual,budget) (line cogs, division sporting)
The following error message is produced.
ERROR: A right parenthesis or an operator is expected after LINE.
|
Copyright © 2001, 2002 Oracle Corporation. All Rights Reserved. |
|