pyspark.sql.functions.window

pyspark.sql.functions.window(timeColumn: ColumnOrName, windowDuration: str, slideDuration: Optional[str] = None, startTime: Optional[str] = None) → pyspark.sql.column.Column[source]

Bucketize rows into one or more time windows given a timestamp specifying column. Window starts are inclusive but the window ends are exclusive, e.g. 12:05 will be in the window [12:05,12:10) but not in [12:00,12:05). Windows can support microsecond precision. Windows in the order of months are not supported.

The time column must be of pyspark.sql.types.TimestampType.

Durations are provided as strings, e.g. ‘1 second’, ‘1 day 12 hours’, ‘2 minutes’. Valid interval strings are ‘week’, ‘day’, ‘hour’, ‘minute’, ‘second’, ‘millisecond’, ‘microsecond’. If the slideDuration is not provided, the windows will be tumbling windows.

The startTime is the offset with respect to 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC with which to start window intervals. For example, in order to have hourly tumbling windows that start 15 minutes past the hour, e.g. 12:15-13:15, 13:15-14:15… provide startTime as 15 minutes.

The output column will be a struct called ‘window’ by default with the nested columns ‘start’ and ‘end’, where ‘start’ and ‘end’ will be of pyspark.sql.types.TimestampType.

New in version 2.0.0.

Parameters
timeColumnColumn

The column or the expression to use as the timestamp for windowing by time. The time column must be of TimestampType or TimestampNTZType.

windowDurationstr

A string specifying the width of the window, e.g. 10 minutes, 1 second. Check org.apache.spark.unsafe.types.CalendarInterval for valid duration identifiers. Note that the duration is a fixed length of time, and does not vary over time according to a calendar. For example, 1 day always means 86,400,000 milliseconds, not a calendar day.

slideDurationstr, optional

A new window will be generated every slideDuration. Must be less than or equal to the windowDuration. Check org.apache.spark.unsafe.types.CalendarInterval for valid duration identifiers. This duration is likewise absolute, and does not vary according to a calendar.

startTimestr, optional

The offset with respect to 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC with which to start window intervals. For example, in order to have hourly tumbling windows that start 15 minutes past the hour, e.g. 12:15-13:15, 13:15-14:15… provide startTime as 15 minutes.

Examples

>>> import datetime
>>> df = spark.createDataFrame(
...     [(datetime.datetime(2016, 3, 11, 9, 0, 7), 1)],
... ).toDF("date", "val")
>>> w = df.groupBy(window("date", "5 seconds")).agg(sum("val").alias("sum"))
>>> w.select(w.window.start.cast("string").alias("start"),
...          w.window.end.cast("string").alias("end"), "sum").collect()
[Row(start='2016-03-11 09:00:05', end='2016-03-11 09:00:10', sum=1)]