Flattened table example
In the following example, columns orderFact.cust_name and orderFact.cust_gender are defined as SET USING and DEFAULT columns, respectively.
In the following example, columns orderFact.cust_name
and orderFact.cust_gender
are defined as SET USING and DEFAULT columns, respectively. Both columns obtain their values by querying table custDim
:
=> CREATE TABLE public.custDim(
cid int PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
name varchar(20),
age int,
gender varchar(1)
);
=> CREATE TABLE public.orderFact(
order_id int PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
order_date timestamp DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
cid int REFERENCES public.custDim(cid),
cust_name varchar(20) SET USING (SELECT name FROM public.custDim WHERE (custDim.cid = orderFact.cid)),
cust_gender varchar(1) DEFAULT (SELECT gender FROM public.custDim WHERE (custDim.cid = orderFact.cid)),
amount numeric(12,2)
)
PARTITION BY order_date::DATE GROUP BY CALENDAR_HIERARCHY_DAY(order_date::DATE, 2, 2);
The following INSERT commands load data into both tables:
=> INSERT INTO custDim VALUES(1, 'Alice', 25, 'F');
=> INSERT INTO custDim VALUES(2, 'Boz', 30, 'M');
=> INSERT INTO custDim VALUES(3, 'Eva', 32, 'F');
=>
=> INSERT INTO orderFact (order_id, cid, amount) VALUES(100, 1, 15);
=> INSERT INTO orderFact (order_id, cid, amount) VALUES(200, 1, 1000);
=> INSERT INTO orderFact (order_id, cid, amount) VALUES(300, 2, -50);
=> INSERT INTO orderFact (order_id, cid, amount) VALUES(400, 3, 100);
=> INSERT INTO orderFact (order_id, cid, amount) VALUES(500, 2, 200);
=> COMMIT;
When you query the tables, Vertica returns the following result sets:
=> SELECT * FROM custDim;
cid | name | age | gender
-----+-------+-----+--------
1 | Alice | 25 | F
2 | Boz | 30 | M
3 | Eva | 32 | F
(3 rows)
=> SELECT order_id, order_date::date, cid, cust_name, cust_gender, amount FROM orderFact ORDER BY cid;
order_id | order_date | cid | cust_name | cust_gender | amount
----------+------------+-----+-----------+-------------+---------
100 | 2018-12-31 | 1 | | F | 15.00
200 | 2018-12-31 | 1 | | F | 1000.00
300 | 2018-12-31 | 2 | | M | -50.00
500 | 2018-12-31 | 2 | | M | 200.00
400 | 2018-12-31 | 3 | | F | 100.00
(5 rows)
Vertica automatically populates the DEFAULT column orderFact.cust_gender
, but the SET USING column orderFact.cust_name
remains NULL. You can automatically populate this column by calling the function REFRESH_COLUMNS on flattened table orderFact. This function invokes the SET USING query for column orderFact.cust_name
and populates the column from the result set:
=> SELECT REFRESH_COLUMNS('orderFact', 'cust_name', 'REBUILD');
REFRESH_COLUMNS
-------------------------------
refresh_columns completed
(1 row)
=> SELECT order_id, order_date::date, cid, cust_name, cust_gender, amount FROM orderFact ORDER BY cid;
order_id | order_date | cid | cust_name | cust_gender | amount
----------+------------+-----+-----------+-------------+---------
100 | 2018-12-31 | 1 | Alice | F | 15.00
200 | 2018-12-31 | 1 | Alice | F | 1000.00
300 | 2018-12-31 | 2 | Boz | M | -50.00
500 | 2018-12-31 | 2 | Boz | M | 200.00
400 | 2018-12-31 | 3 | Eva | F | 100.00
(5 rows)