Tabular expression statements
Applies to: ✅ Microsoft Fabric ✅ Azure Data Explorer ✅ Azure Monitor ✅ Microsoft Sentinel
The tabular expression statement is what people usually have in mind when they talk about queries. This statement usually appears last in the statement list, and both its input and its output consists of tables or tabular datasets. Any two statements must be separated by a semicolon.
A tabular expression statement is generally composed of tabular data sources such as tables, tabular data operators such as filters and projections, and optional rendering operators. The composition is represented by the pipe character (|
), giving the statement a regular form that visually represents the flow of tabular data from left to right.
Each operator accepts a tabular dataset "from the pipe", and other inputs including more tabular datasets from the body of the operator, then emits a tabular dataset to the next operator that follows.
Source |
Operator1 |
Operator2 |
RenderInstruction
Learn more about syntax conventions.
Name | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Source | string |
✔️ | A tabular data source. See Tabular data sources. |
Operator | string |
✔️ | Tabular data operators, such as filters and projections. |
RenderInstruction | string |
Rendering operators or instructions. |
A tabular data source produces sets of records, to be further processed by tabular data operators. The following list shows supported tabular data sources:
- Table references
- The tabular range operator
- The print operator
- An invocation of a function that returns a table
- A table literal ("datatable")
The following query counts the number of records in the StormEvents
table that have a value of "FLORIDA" in the State
column.
StormEvents
| where State == "FLORIDA"
| count
Output
Count |
---|
1042 |
In the following example, the join operator is used to combine records from two tabular data sources: the StormEvents
table and the PopulationData
table.
StormEvents
| where InjuriesDirect + InjuriesIndirect > 50
| join (PopulationData) on State
| project State, Population, TotalInjuries = InjuriesDirect + InjuriesIndirect
Output
State | Population | TotalInjuries |
---|---|---|
ALABAMA | 4918690 | 60 |
CALIFORNIA | 39562900 | 61 |
KANSAS | 2915270 | 63 |
MISSOURI | 6153230 | 422 |
OKLAHOMA | 3973710 | 200 |
TENNESSEE | 6886720 | 187 |
TEXAS | 29363100 | 137 |