29 juni 2022

How to use the Lookup() function in Qlik Sense

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Learn how to use the lookup function in Qlik Sense and QlikView

Every Friday at Bitmetric we’re posting a new Qlik certification practice question to our LinkedIn company page. Last Friday we asked the following Qlik Data Architect certification practice question about the Lookup() function in Qlik:

Please refer to the tables in figures 1 and 2. Which manufacturers would be loaded if we use the load statement from figure 3?

The correct answer is C: Roller, UMW, Cobretti, Grotti

Most of you got this answer right and that is no surprise. Things like vertical lookup, horizontal lookup and maybe even index match must be very familiar topics for many, but why still use Excel when we have Qlik, right?

The lookup() function will evaluate a field from the current or a previously loaded table and find the matching field you enter. Or to put it as the syntax:

lookup(field_name, match_field_name, match_field_value [, table_name])

To evaluate the right answer let’s visualize what lookup() has exactly done in the figure below:

Picture with an example of how the Qlik lookup() function works.

The Lookup() function is told to find the field value of ‘Manufacturer’ in the target table and match this to the field value of ‘ManufacturerID’ in the target table and ‘ManufacturerID’ in the current table. In the last part of the syntax we determine the target table which in this example is ‘ManufacturerData’. After the match is made it is added to the current table as the column ‘Manufacturer’. Please notice that all the input which refer to the target table are given in quotes. This is mandatory since the arguments without quotes refer to the current table.

In this example we also immediately notice some of the limitations of lookup(). When Lookup() is being used, it will always return the value based on the load order and if no match is found it will return NULL. So in this example we are missing ManufacturerID = 4, so it returns NULL and since ManufacturerID = 5 is duplicated, it will return Grotti, since that value is loaded first.

And hopefully this is the moment many of you hear the alarm bells ring about data quality. There are quite some things to fix in this data model, we agree, and probably lookup shouldn’t even be used here. Other options like ApplyMap() or even a join could just as well be used and are maybe even better, since the performance of lookup() is not known to be the fastest. So why use lookup? The main reason of this example is not to only show the disadvantages of lookup() but also bring us to the advantages. The strength of lookup() doesn’t lie in applying the lookup to whole tables, but more to get single values from a table, for example as use in variables:

LET vExcludeManufacturer =
Lookup('Manufacturer', 'ManufacturerID', 1, 'ManufacturerData');

LET vExcludeManufacturerID =
Lookup('ManufacturerID', 'Manufacturer', 'Roller' , 'ManufacturerData');

These will result in:

vExcludeManufacturer = Roller

vExcludeManufacturerID = 1

And while this is an example in a very small dataset, the use case for large datasets is quite clear.

So to cut it short, while ApplyMap() or Join would be the better and most of the times faster solutions to join fields to another table, Lookup() is a great way to quickly find individual values from a table, for example to use in a variable.

That’s it for this week. See you next Friday?

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Barry beschikt over meer dan 20 jaar ervaring als architect, developer, trainer en auteur op het gebied van Data & Analytics. Hij is bereid om je te helpen met al je vragen.