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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CALCITE-4496?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Julian Hyde resolved CALCITE-4496.
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    Fix Version/s: 1.38.0
       Resolution: Fixed

Fixed in 
[66919e4|https://github.com/apache/calcite/commit/66919e4d44a2dc5019b595569bbd9fbfd5d163eb].

> Measure columns ("SELECT ... AS MEASURE")
> -----------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CALCITE-4496
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CALCITE-4496
>             Project: Calcite
>          Issue Type: Bug
>            Reporter: Julian Hyde
>            Assignee: Julian Hyde
>            Priority: Major
>             Fix For: 1.38.0
>
>
> In multi-dimensional languages such as MDX, DAX, Tableau, you can define 
> calculations in your models that can be re-evaluated in other dimensional 
> contexts. (The models are often called cubes, and the calculations are often 
> called measures.)
> In SQL, the model is a view (or a sub-query in the FROM clause) but the 
> columns are just values. Suppose you have a private {{Employees}} table, a 
> {{Departments}} view that rolls {{Employees}} up to department level and has 
> an {{averageSalary}} column. Now suppose you wish to roll up 
> {{averageSalary}} to the region level. The values that went into 
> {{averageSalary}} are not available to you, either directly or indirectly, so 
> the best you can do is to average-the-averages.
> In this proposed (and experimental) feature, you can define a special kind of 
> column - a measure - in the SELECT list of a view (or sub-query in a FROM 
> clause), and it remains a calculation. When a query uses a measure column, 
> the calculation is re-evaluated in the context of that query.
> To some extent, this breaches the "black box" property of SQL views. 
> Hitherto, a SQL view can be replaced with a table that has the same contents, 
> and all queries that use that view will return the same results. That 
> property no longer holds. But the view remains a useful "hiding" abstraction, 
> and the rows that compose that view cannot be viewed directly.
> Like dimensional models, measures in SQL would allow high-level abstractions 
> such as key-performance indicators (KPIs) to be shared and composed. Unlike 
> dimensional models, the models remain relational, namely, it is still 
> possible to enumerate and count the rows in a model.
> Consider the following view and query that uses it:
> {code:sql}
> CREATE VIEW EmpSummary AS
> SELECT deptno,
>     job,
>     AVG(sal) AS avg_sal,
>     AVG(sal) AS MEASURE avg_sal_measure,
>     COUNT(*) + 1 AS MEASURE count_plus_one_measure
> FROM Emp
> GROUP BY deptno, job;
> SELECT deptno,
>     AVG(avg_sal) AS a1,
>     AGGREGATE(avg_sal_measure) AS a2,
>     AGGREGATE(count_plus_one_measure) AS c1
> FROM EmpSummary
> GROUP BY deptno;{code}
> Note that there is a special aggregate function, {{AGGREGATE}}, that rolls up 
> measures. Columns {{a1}} and {{a2}} will contain different values; the first 
> averages the averages, and the second computes the average from the raw data. 
> Column {{c1}} will return the number of employees in each department plus 
> one, not rolling up the "plus one" for each distinct job in the department.
> This is just a brief sketch illustrating the purpose of measures. This 
> feature is experimental, the syntax will no doubt change, and much of the 
> semantics (for example, what expressions are valid as measures, whether 
> measures remain measures they appear in the SELECT clause of an enclosing 
> query, and what is the "context" in which a measure is evaluated) need to be 
> ironed out.



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