Array functions
AQL provides functions for higher-level array manipulation. Also see the
numeric functions for functions that work on number arrays.
If you want to concatenate the elements of an array equivalent to join()
in JavaScript, see CONCAT() and
CONCAT_SEPARATOR() in the string functions chapter.
Apart from that, AQL also offers several language constructs:
- simple array access of individual elements,
- array operators for array expansion and contraction, optionally with inline filter, limit and projection,
- array comparison operators to compare each element in an array to a value or the elements of another array,
- loop-based operations on arrays using FOR, SORT, LIMIT, as well as COLLECT for grouping, which also offers efficient aggregation.
APPEND()
APPEND(anyArray, values, unique) → newArray
Add all elements of an array to another array. All values are added at the end of the array (right side).
It can also be used to append a single element to an array. It is not necessary to wrap it in an array (unless it is an array itself). You may also use PUSH() instead.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- values (array|any): array, whose elements shall be added to
anyArray
- unique (bool, optional): if set to
true
, all duplicate values are removed from the resulting array. Ifvalues
is an empty array or if eitheranyArray
orvalues
isnull
, then the other input array is returned unmodified. The default isfalse
. - returns newArray (array): the modified array
Examples
CONTAINS_ARRAY()
This is an alias for POSITION().
COUNT()
This is an alias for LENGTH().
COUNT_DISTINCT()
COUNT_DISTINCT(anyArray) → number
Get the number of distinct elements in an array.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns number: the number of distinct elements in anyArray.
Examples
RETURN COUNT_DISTINCT([ 1, 2, 3 ])
[
3
]
RETURN COUNT_DISTINCT([ "yes", "no", "yes", "sauron", "no", "yes" ])
[
3
]
COUNT_UNIQUE()
This is an alias for COUNT_DISTINCT().
FIRST()
FIRST(anyArray) → firstElement
Get the first element of an array. It is the same as anyArray[0]
.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns firstElement (any|null): the first element of anyArray, or null if the array is empty.
Examples
RETURN FIRST([ 1, 2, 3 ])
[
1
]
RETURN FIRST([])
[
null
]
FLATTEN()
FLATTEN(anyArray, depth) → flatArray
Turn an array of arrays into a flat array. All array elements in array will be expanded in the result array. Non-array elements are added as they are. The function will recurse into sub-arrays up to the specified depth. Duplicates will not be removed.
Also see array contraction.
- array (array): array with elements of arbitrary type, including nested arrays
- depth (number, optional): flatten up to this many levels, the default is 1
- returns flatArray (array): a flattened array
Examples
To fully flatten the example array, use a depth of 2:
INTERLEAVE()
Introduced in: v3.7.1
INTERLEAVE(array1, array2, ... arrayN) → newArray
Accepts an arbitrary number of arrays and produces a new array with the elements interleaved. It iterates over the input arrays in a round robin fashion, picks one element from each array per iteration, and combines them in that sequence into a result array. The input arrays can have different amounts of elements.
- arrays (array, repeatable): an arbitrary number of arrays as multiple arguments (at least 2)
- returns newArray (array): the interleaved array
Examples
INTERSECTION()
INTERSECTION(array1, array2, ... arrayN) → newArray
Return the intersection of all arrays specified. The result is an array of values that occur in all arguments.
Other set operations are UNION(), MINUS() and OUTERSECTION().
- arrays (array, repeatable): an arbitrary number of arrays as multiple arguments (at least 2)
- returns newArray (array): a single array with only the elements, which exist in all provided arrays. The element order is random. Duplicates are removed.
Examples
RETURN INTERSECTION( [2,4,6], [8,10,12], [14,16,18] )
[ [] ]
JACCARD()
Introduced in: v3.7.0
JACCARD(array1, array2) → jaccardIndex
Calculate the Jaccard index of two arrays.
This similarity measure is also known as Intersection over Union and could be computed (less efficient and more verbose) as follows:
COUNT(a) == 0 && COUNT(b) == 0
? 1 // two empty sets have a similarity of 1 by definition
: COUNT(INTERSECTION(array1, array2)) / COUNT(UNION_DISTINCT(array1, array2))
- array1 (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- array2 (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns jaccardIndex (number): calculated Jaccard index of the input arrays array1 and array2
RETURN JACCARD( [1,2,3,4], [3,4,5,6] )
[
0.3333333333333333
]
RETURN JACCARD( [1,1,2,2,2,3], [2,2,3,4] )
[
0.5
]
RETURN JACCARD( [1,2,3], [] )
[
0
]
RETURN JACCARD( [], [] )
[
1
]
LAST()
LAST(anyArray) → lastElement
Get the last element of an array. It is the same as anyArray[-1]
.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns lastElement (any|null): the last element of anyArray or null if the array is empty.
Example
RETURN LAST( [1,2,3,4,5] )
[
5
]
LENGTH()
LENGTH(anyArray) → length
Determine the number of elements in an array.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns length (number): the number of array elements in anyArray.
LENGTH() can also determine the number of attribute keys of an object / document, the amount of documents in a collection and the character length of a string.
Input | Length |
---|---|
String | Number of Unicode characters |
Number | Number of Unicode characters that represent the number |
Array | Number of elements |
Object | Number of first level elements |
true | 1 |
false | 0 |
null | 0 |
Examples
RETURN LENGTH( "🥑" )
[
1
]
RETURN LENGTH( 1234 )
[
4
]
RETURN LENGTH( [1,2,3,4,5,6,7] )
[
7
]
RETURN LENGTH( false )
[
0
]
RETURN LENGTH( {a:1, b:2, c:3, d:4, e:{f:5,g:6}} )
[
5
]
MINUS()
MINUS(array1, array2, ... arrayN) → newArray
Return the difference of all arrays specified.
Other set operations are UNION(), INTERSECTION() and OUTERSECTION().
- arrays (array, repeatable): an arbitrary number of arrays as multiple arguments (at least 2)
- returns newArray (array): an array of values that occur in the first array, but not in any of the subsequent arrays. The order of the result array is undefined and should not be relied on. Duplicates will be removed.
Example
NTH()
NTH(anyArray, position) → nthElement
Get the element of an array at a given position. It is the same as anyArray[position]
for positive positions, but does not support negative positions.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- position (number): position of desired element in array, positions start at 0
- returns nthElement (any|null): the array element at the given position. If position is negative or beyond the upper bound of the array, then null will be returned.
Examples
RETURN NTH( [ "foo", "bar", "baz" ], 2 )
[
"baz"
]
RETURN NTH( [ "foo", "bar", "baz" ], 3 )
[
null
]
RETURN NTH( [ "foo", "bar", "baz" ], -1 )
[
null
]
OUTERSECTION()
OUTERSECTION(array1, array2, ... arrayN) → newArray
Return the values that occur only once across all arrays specified.
Other set operations are UNION(), MINUS() and INTERSECTION().
- arrays (array, repeatable): an arbitrary number of arrays as multiple arguments (at least 2)
- returns newArray (array): a single array with only the elements that exist only once across all provided arrays. The element order is random.
Example
POP()
POP(anyArray) → newArray
Remove the last element of array.
To append an element (right side), see PUSH().
To remove the first element, see SHIFT().
To remove an element at an arbitrary position, see REMOVE_NTH().
- anyArray (array): an array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns newArray (array): anyArray without the last element. If it’s already empty or has only a single element left, an empty array is returned.
Examples
RETURN POP( [ 1 ] )
[ [] ]
POSITION()
POSITION(anyArray, search, returnIndex) → position
Return whether search is contained in array. Optionally return the position.
- anyArray (array): the haystack, an array with elements of arbitrary type
- search (any): the needle, an element of arbitrary type
- returnIndex (bool, optional): if set to true, the position of the match is returned instead of a boolean. The default is false.
- returns position (bool|number): true if search is contained in anyArray, false otherwise. If returnIndex is enabled, the position of the match is returned (positions start at 0), or -1 if it’s not found.
To determine if or at which position a string occurs in another string, see the CONTAINS() string function.
Examples
RETURN POSITION( [2,4,6,8], 4 )
[
true
]
RETURN POSITION( [2,4,6,8], 4, true )
[
1
]
PUSH()
PUSH(anyArray, value, unique) → newArray
Append value to anyArray (right side).
To remove the last element, see POP().
To prepend a value (left side), see UNSHIFT().
To append multiple elements, see APPEND().
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- value (any): an element of arbitrary type
- unique (bool): if set to true, then value is not added if already present in the array. The default is false.
- returns newArray (array): anyArray with value added at the end (right side)
Note: The unique flag only controls if value is added if it’s already present in anyArray. Duplicate elements that already exist in anyArray will not be removed. To make an array unique, use the UNIQUE() function.
Examples
REMOVE_NTH()
REMOVE_NTH(anyArray, position) → newArray
Remove the element at position from the anyArray.
To remove the first element, see SHIFT().
To remove the last element, see POP().
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- position (number): the position of the element to remove. Positions start at 0. Negative positions are supported, with -1 being the last array element. If position is out of bounds, the array is returned unmodified.
- returns newArray (array): anyArray without the element at position
Examples
REPLACE_NTH()
Introduced in: v3.7.0
REPLACE_NTH(anyArray, position, replaceValue, defaultPaddingValue) → newArray
Replace the element at position in anyArray with replaceValue.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- position (number): the position of the element to replace. Positions start at 0. Negative positions are supported, with -1 being the last array element. If a negative position is out of bounds, then it is set to the first element (0)
- replaceValue the value to be inserted at position
- defaultPaddingValue to be used for padding if position is two or more elements beyond the last element in anyArray
- returns newArray (array): anyArray with the element at position replaced by replaceValue, or appended to anyArray and possibly padded by defaultPaddingValue
It is allowed to specify a position beyond the upper array boundary:
- replaceValue is appended if position is equal to the array length
- if it is higher, defaultPaddingValue is appended to anyArray as many times as needed to place replaceValue at position
- if no defaultPaddingValue is supplied in above case, then a query error is raised
Examples
Trying to access out of bounds, without providing a padding value will result in an error:
arangosh> db._query('RETURN REPLACE_NTH( [ "a", "b", "c" ], 6 , "z")');
[ArangoError 1542: AQL: invalid argument type in call to function 'REPLACE_NTH()' (while optimizing ast)]
REMOVE_VALUE()
REMOVE_VALUE(anyArray, value, limit) → newArray
Remove all occurrences of value in anyArray. Optionally with a limit to the number of removals.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- value (any): an element of arbitrary type
- limit (number, optional): cap the number of removals to this value
- returns newArray (array): anyArray with value removed
Examples
REMOVE_VALUES()
REMOVE_VALUES(anyArray, values) → newArray
Remove all occurrences of any of the values from anyArray.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- values (array): an array with elements of arbitrary type, that shall be removed from anyArray
- returns newArray (array): anyArray with all individual values removed
Example
REVERSE()
REVERSE(anyArray) → reversedArray
Return an array with its elements reversed.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns reversedArray (array): a new array with all elements of anyArray in reversed order
Example
SHIFT()
SHIFT(anyArray) → newArray
Remove the first element of anyArray.
To prepend an element (left side), see UNSHIFT().
To remove the last element, see POP().
To remove an element at an arbitrary position, see REMOVE_NTH().
- anyArray (array): array with elements with arbitrary type
- returns newArray (array): anyArray without the left-most element. If anyArray is already empty or has only one element left, an empty array is returned.
Examples
RETURN SHIFT( [ 1 ] )
[ [] ]
SLICE()
SLICE(anyArray, start, length) → newArray
Extract a slice of anyArray.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- start (number): start extraction at this element. Positions start at 0. Negative values indicate positions from the end of the array.
- length (number, optional): extract up to length elements, or all elements from start up to length if negative (exclusive)
- returns newArray (array): the specified slice of anyArray. If length is not specified, all array elements starting at start will be returned.
Examples
RETURN SLICE( [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ], 0, 1 )
[
[
1
]
]
SORTED()
SORTED(anyArray) → newArray
Sort all elements in anyArray. The function will use the default comparison order for AQL value types.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns newArray (array): anyArray, with elements sorted
Example
SORTED_UNIQUE()
SORTED_UNIQUE(anyArray) → newArray
Sort all elements in anyArray. The function will use the default comparison order for AQL value types. Additionally, the values in the result array will be made unique.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns newArray (array): anyArray, with elements sorted and duplicates removed
Example
UNION()
UNION(array1, array2, ... arrayN) → newArray
Return the union of all arrays specified.
Other set operations are MINUS(), INTERSECTION() and OUTERSECTION().
- arrays (array, repeatable): an arbitrary number of arrays as multiple arguments (at least 2)
- returns newArray (array): all array elements combined in a single array, in any order
Examples
Note: No duplicates will be removed. In order to remove duplicates, please use either UNION_DISTINCT() or apply UNIQUE() on the result of UNION():
UNION_DISTINCT()
UNION_DISTINCT(array1, array2, ... arrayN) → newArray
Return the union of distinct values of all arrays specified.
- arrays (array, repeatable): an arbitrary number of arrays as multiple arguments (at least 2)
- returns newArray (array): the elements of all given arrays in a single array, without duplicates, in any order
Example
UNIQUE()
UNIQUE(anyArray) → newArray
Return all unique elements in anyArray. To determine uniqueness, the function will use the comparison order.
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- returns newArray (array): anyArray without duplicates, in any order
Example
UNSHIFT()
UNSHIFT(anyArray, value, unique) → newArray
Prepend value to anyArray (left side).
To remove the first element, see SHIFT().
To append a value (right side), see PUSH().
- anyArray (array): array with elements of arbitrary type
- value (any): an element of arbitrary type
- unique (bool): if set to true, then value is not added if already present in the array. The default is false.
- returns newArray (array): anyArray with value added at the start (left side)
Note: The unique flag only controls if value is added if it’s already present in anyArray. Duplicate elements that already exist in anyArray will not be removed. To make an array unique, use the UNIQUE() function.
Examples