snowflake.snowpark.DataFrame.join_table_function¶
- DataFrame.join_table_function(func: str | List[str] | TableFunctionCall, *func_arguments: ColumnOrName, **func_named_arguments: ColumnOrName) DataFrame [source]¶
Lateral joins the current DataFrame with the output of the specified table function.
References: Snowflake SQL functions.
- Example 1
Lateral join a table function by using the name and parameters directly:
>>> df = session.sql("select 'James' as name, 'address1 address2 address3' as addresses") >>> df.join_table_function("split_to_table", df["addresses"], lit(" ")).show() -------------------------------------------------------------------- |"NAME" |"ADDRESSES" |"SEQ" |"INDEX" |"VALUE" | -------------------------------------------------------------------- |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |1 |address1 | |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |2 |address2 | |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |3 |address3 | --------------------------------------------------------------------
- Example 2
Lateral join a table function by calling:
>>> from snowflake.snowpark.functions import table_function >>> split_to_table = table_function("split_to_table") >>> df = session.sql("select 'James' as name, 'address1 address2 address3' as addresses") >>> df.join_table_function(split_to_table(df["addresses"], lit(" "))).show() -------------------------------------------------------------------- |"NAME" |"ADDRESSES" |"SEQ" |"INDEX" |"VALUE" | -------------------------------------------------------------------- |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |1 |address1 | |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |2 |address2 | |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |3 |address3 | --------------------------------------------------------------------
- Example 3
Lateral join a table function with the partition and order by clause:
>>> from snowflake.snowpark.functions import table_function >>> split_to_table = table_function("split_to_table") >>> df = session.create_dataframe([ ... ["John", "James", "address1 address2 address3"], ... ["Mike", "James", "address4 address5 address6"], ... ["Cathy", "Stone", "address4 address5 address6"], ... ], ... schema=["first_name", "last_name", "addresses"]) >>> df.join_table_function(split_to_table(df["addresses"], lit(" ")).over(partition_by="last_name", order_by="first_name")).show() ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |"FIRST_NAME" |"LAST_NAME" |"ADDRESSES" |"SEQ" |"INDEX" |"VALUE" | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |John |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |1 |address1 | |John |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |2 |address2 | |John |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |3 |address3 | |Mike |James |address4 address5 address6 |2 |1 |address4 | |Mike |James |address4 address5 address6 |2 |2 |address5 | |Mike |James |address4 address5 address6 |2 |3 |address6 | |Cathy |Stone |address4 address5 address6 |3 |1 |address4 | |Cathy |Stone |address4 address5 address6 |3 |2 |address5 | |Cathy |Stone |address4 address5 address6 |3 |3 |address6 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Example 4
Lateral join a table function with aliasing the output column names:
>>> from snowflake.snowpark.functions import table_function >>> split_to_table = table_function("split_to_table") >>> df = session.sql("select 'James' as name, 'address1 address2 address3' as addresses") >>> df.join_table_function(split_to_table(col("addresses"), lit(" ")).alias("seq", "idx", "val")).show() ------------------------------------------------------------------ |"NAME" |"ADDRESSES" |"SEQ" |"IDX" |"VAL" | ------------------------------------------------------------------ |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |1 |address1 | |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |2 |address2 | |James |address1 address2 address3 |1 |3 |address3 | ------------------------------------------------------------------
- Parameters:
func_name – The SQL function name.
func_arguments – The positional arguments for the SQL function.
func_named_arguments – The named arguments for the SQL function, if it accepts named arguments.
- Returns:
A new
DataFrame
that has the columns carried from thisDataFrame
, plus new columns and rows from the lateral join with the table function.
See also
Session.table_function()
, which creates a newDataFrame
by using the SQL table function.