Oracle® OLAP DML Reference 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14346-01 |
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The EVERY function returns YES
when every value of a Boolean expression is TRUE
, or NO
when any value of the expression is FALSE
.
Return Value
BOOLEAN
Syntax
EVERY(boolean-expression [dimension...])
Arguments
The Boolean expression whose values are to be evaluated.
The name of a dimension of the result; or, the name of a relation between one of the dimensions of boolean-expression and another dimension that you want as a dimension of the result.
By default, EVERY returns a single YES
or NO
value. When you indicate one or more dimensions for the result, EVERY tests for TRUE
values along the dimensions that are specified and returns an array of values. Each dimension must be either a dimension of boolean-expression or related to one of its dimensions.
Tip: When you specify a dimension that is not an actual dimension of boolean-expression, but, instead, is dimension that is related to a dimension of boolean-expression and when there is more than one relation between the two dimensions, Oracle OLAP uses the default relation between the dimensions to perform the calculation. (See the RELATION command for more information on default relations.) When you do not want Oracle OLAP to use this default relation, specify the related dimension by specifying the name of a specify relation. |
Notes
The Effect of NASKIP on EVERY
EVERY is affected by the NASKIP option. When NASKIP is set to YES
(the default), EVERY ignores NA
values and returns YES
when every value of the expression that is not NA
is TRUE
and returns NO
when any values are not TRUE
. When NASKIP is set to NO
, EVERY returns NA
when any value of the expression is NA
. When all the values of the expression are NA
, EVERY returns NA
for either setting of NASKIP.
Examples
Example 11-33 Testing for All-True Values by District
You can use the EVERY function to test whether each district's sales of sportswear have exceeded $50,000 in every month. To have the results dimensioned by district, specify district
as the second argument to EVERY.
LIMIT product TO 'Sportswear' REPORT HEADING 'Top Sales' EVERY(sales GT 50000, district)
The preceding statements produce the following output.
DISTRICT Top Sales -------------- ---------- Boston No Atlanta Yes Chicago Yes Dallas Yes Denver Yes Seattle NO
Example 11-34 Testing for All-True Values by Region
You might also want to find out the regions for which every district has sportswear sales that exceed $50,000 in every month. Since the region
dimension is related to the district
dimension, you can specify region
instead of district
as a dimension for the results of EVERY.
REPORT HEADING 'Top Sales' EVERY(sales GT 50000, region)
The preceding statement produces the following output.
REGION Top Sales -------------- ---------- East No Central Yes West NO