6 april 2023 Extracting text from strings with the SubField() function in Qlik Sense Deel dit bericht 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 SubField() function in Qlik Sense. The answers were unanimous: The correct answer is C The SubField() function returns the n-th field of a string based on a delimiter. Consider the following string: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog This string contains multiple words, separated by spaces (the delimiter). Let’s load this string to a field called Sentence: Load * Inline [ Sentence The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog]; We can now return individual words from Sentence by using the SubField() function and specifying the field number. For example: SubField(Sentence, ' ', 4) Returns fox, the fourth word in the sentence, starting from the left of the string and using space as the delimiter. We can use a negative number to retrieve part of the string from the right. For example: SubField(Sentence, ' ', -2) Returns lazy, the second word from the end of the string. All in all, the SubField() function is very useful for quickly extracting parts of well-defined strings. It’s certainly easier than using nested combinations of Left(), Right(), Mid(), Len() or other Qlik text functions. Some more examples of where SubField() might prove useful: Extracting first or last names from a field containing the full name; Extracting a domain name from an email address; Extracting an area code from a phone number; and much more. Turning fields into rows with the SubField() function In the examples above we’ve used the third argument to specify the field number to retrieve. This is an optional argument. If omitted, the SubField() function can be used to split a string into individual rows. Consider the following table again: Load * Inline [ Sentence The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog]; We can use the SubField() function to split the sentence into individual words like this: Words:Load SubField(Sentence, ' ') as Word;Load * Inline [ Sentence The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog]; The resulting Words table will contain the 9 rows, one for each word in the sentence. Useful helper function: SubStringCount() The SubStringCount() function is useful when you want to know how many delimited fields a string contains. It takes a string and the substring to search for. For example: SubStringCount('The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog', ' ') Will return 8. “Why does it return 8 when the string contains 9 words?” The SubStringCount() function returns 8 because it isn’t looking for the words, but for the delimiter. The sentence contains 8 spaces, between 9 words. It’s good to keep this in mind. That’s it for this week, see you next Friday! More from the Bitmetric team Qlik Cloud Backup Protect your investment in Qlik with daily incremental backups stored in an encrypted environment with redundant storage. Available for as little as 2 Euro per day. Learn more. Join the team! Do you want to work within a highly-skilled, informal team where craftsmanship, ingenuity, knowledge sharing and personal development are valued and encouraged? Check out our job openings. Friday Qlik Test Prep Functions Solution Hoe kunnen we je ondersteunen? 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. Bel ons Mail ons 25 april 2025 Game-Changer in Qlik: Set Analysis Now Works WITHOUT Using It’s Syntax! Discover Qlik Cloud’s latest feature that lets you apply object level filters without writing any set analysis syntax. A simpler and faster way to build dashboards, especially for non-technical users. Read more in this blog post. New Release Qlik 23 april 2025 When Everyone Has Different Numbers: Why Data Alignment Matters Different teams, different data, different results. This post explores how misaligned data leads to confusion, and how TimeXtender helps bring everyone back to the same page. TimeXtender 16 april 2025 The Cost of Bad Data: What Is It Really Doing to Your Business? Inaccurate or outdated data doesn’t just cause small hiccups. This can severely impact your bottom line. It slows down your teams, leads to expensive errors, and creates serious compliance risks. The good news is that these challenges are avoidable. TimeXtender
25 april 2025 Game-Changer in Qlik: Set Analysis Now Works WITHOUT Using It’s Syntax! Discover Qlik Cloud’s latest feature that lets you apply object level filters without writing any set analysis syntax. A simpler and faster way to build dashboards, especially for non-technical users. Read more in this blog post. New Release Qlik
23 april 2025 When Everyone Has Different Numbers: Why Data Alignment Matters Different teams, different data, different results. This post explores how misaligned data leads to confusion, and how TimeXtender helps bring everyone back to the same page. TimeXtender
16 april 2025 The Cost of Bad Data: What Is It Really Doing to Your Business? Inaccurate or outdated data doesn’t just cause small hiccups. This can severely impact your bottom line. It slows down your teams, leads to expensive errors, and creates serious compliance risks. The good news is that these challenges are avoidable. TimeXtender