The code snippets on this page need the following imports if you’re outside the pyqgis console:
1from qgis.core import (
2 edit,
3 QgsExpression,
4 QgsExpressionContext,
5 QgsFeature,
6 QgsFeatureRequest,
7 QgsField,
8 QgsFields,
9 QgsVectorLayer,
10 QgsPointXY,
11 QgsGeometry,
12 QgsProject,
13 QgsExpressionContextUtils
14)
11. Expressions, Filtering and Calculating Values
QGIS has some support for parsing of SQL-like expressions. Only a small subset
of SQL syntax is supported. The expressions can be evaluated either as boolean
predicates (returning True
or False
) or as functions (returning a scalar value).
See Výrazy in the User Manual for a complete list of available
functions.
Three basic types are supported:
number — both whole numbers and decimal numbers, e.g.
123
,3.14
string — they have to be enclosed in single quotes:
'hello world'
column reference — when evaluating, the reference is substituted with the actual value of the field. The names are not escaped.
The following operations are available:
arithmetic operators:
+
,-
,*
,/
,^
parentheses: for enforcing the operator precedence:
(1 + 1) * 3
unary plus and minus:
-12
,+5
mathematical functions:
sqrt
,sin
,cos
,tan
,asin
,acos
,atan
conversion functions:
to_int
,to_real
,to_string
,to_date
geometry functions:
$area
,$length
geometry handling functions:
$x
,$y
,$geometry
,num_geometries
,centroid
And the following predicates are supported:
comparison:
=
,!=
,>
,>=
,<
,<=
pattern matching:
LIKE
(using % and _),~
(regular expressions)logical predicates:
AND
,OR
,NOT
NULL value checking:
IS NULL
,IS NOT NULL
Examples of predicates:
1 + 2 = 3
sin(angle) > 0
'Hello' LIKE 'He%'
(x > 10 AND y > 10) OR z = 0
Examples of scalar expressions:
2 ^ 10
sqrt(val)
$length + 1
11.1. Parsing Expressions
The following example shows how to check if a given expression can be parsed correctly:
1exp = QgsExpression('1 + 1 = 2')
2assert(not exp.hasParserError())
3
4exp = QgsExpression('1 + 1 = ')
5assert(exp.hasParserError())
6
7assert(exp.parserErrorString() == '\nsyntax error, unexpected $end')
11.2. Evaluating Expressions
Expressions can be used in different contexts, for example to filter features or to compute new field values. In any case, the expression has to be evaluated. That means that its value is computed by performing the specified computational steps, which can range from simple arithmetic to aggregate expressions.
11.2.1. Basic Expressions
This basic expression evaluates a simple arithmetic operation:
exp = QgsExpression('2 * 3')
print(exp)
print(exp.evaluate())
<QgsExpression: '2 * 3'>
6
Expression can also be used for comparison, evaluating to 1 (True
)
or 0 (False
)
exp = QgsExpression('1 + 1 = 2')
exp.evaluate()
# 1
11.2.2. Expressions with features
To evaluate an expression against a feature, a QgsExpressionContext
object has to be created and passed to the evaluate function in order to allow the expression to access
the feature’s field values.
The following example shows how to create a feature with a field called „Column“ and how to add this feature to the expression context.
1fields = QgsFields()
2field = QgsField('Column')
3fields.append(field)
4feature = QgsFeature()
5feature.setFields(fields)
6feature.setAttribute(0, 99)
7
8exp = QgsExpression('"Column"')
9context = QgsExpressionContext()
10context.setFeature(feature)
11exp.evaluate(context)
12# 99
The following is a more complete example of how to use expressions in the context of a vector layer, in order to compute new field values:
1from qgis.PyQt.QtCore import QVariant
2
3# create a vector layer
4vl = QgsVectorLayer("Point", "Companies", "memory")
5pr = vl.dataProvider()
6pr.addAttributes([QgsField("Name", QVariant.String),
7 QgsField("Employees", QVariant.Int),
8 QgsField("Revenue", QVariant.Double),
9 QgsField("Rev. per employee", QVariant.Double),
10 QgsField("Sum", QVariant.Double),
11 QgsField("Fun", QVariant.Double)])
12vl.updateFields()
13
14# add data to the first three fields
15my_data = [
16 {'x': 0, 'y': 0, 'name': 'ABC', 'emp': 10, 'rev': 100.1},
17 {'x': 1, 'y': 1, 'name': 'DEF', 'emp': 2, 'rev': 50.5},
18 {'x': 5, 'y': 5, 'name': 'GHI', 'emp': 100, 'rev': 725.9}]
19
20for rec in my_data:
21 f = QgsFeature()
22 pt = QgsPointXY(rec['x'], rec['y'])
23 f.setGeometry(QgsGeometry.fromPointXY(pt))
24 f.setAttributes([rec['name'], rec['emp'], rec['rev']])
25 pr.addFeature(f)
26
27vl.updateExtents()
28QgsProject.instance().addMapLayer(vl)
29
30# The first expression computes the revenue per employee.
31# The second one computes the sum of all revenue values in the layer.
32# The final third expression doesn’t really make sense but illustrates
33# the fact that we can use a wide range of expression functions, such
34# as area and buffer in our expressions:
35expression1 = QgsExpression('"Revenue"/"Employees"')
36expression2 = QgsExpression('sum("Revenue")')
37expression3 = QgsExpression('area(buffer($geometry,"Employees"))')
38
39# QgsExpressionContextUtils.globalProjectLayerScopes() is a convenience
40# function that adds the global, project, and layer scopes all at once.
41# Alternatively, those scopes can also be added manually. In any case,
42# it is important to always go from “most generic” to “most specific”
43# scope, i.e. from global to project to layer
44context = QgsExpressionContext()
45context.appendScopes(QgsExpressionContextUtils.globalProjectLayerScopes(vl))
46
47with edit(vl):
48 for f in vl.getFeatures():
49 context.setFeature(f)
50 f['Rev. per employee'] = expression1.evaluate(context)
51 f['Sum'] = expression2.evaluate(context)
52 f['Fun'] = expression3.evaluate(context)
53 vl.updateFeature(f)
54
55print(f['Sum'])
876.5
11.2.3. Filtering a layer with expressions
The following example can be used to filter a layer and return any feature that matches a predicate.
1layer = QgsVectorLayer("Point?field=Test:integer",
2 "addfeat", "memory")
3
4layer.startEditing()
5
6for i in range(10):
7 feature = QgsFeature()
8 feature.setAttributes([i])
9 assert(layer.addFeature(feature))
10layer.commitChanges()
11
12expression = 'Test >= 3'
13request = QgsFeatureRequest().setFilterExpression(expression)
14
15matches = 0
16for f in layer.getFeatures(request):
17 matches += 1
18
19print(matches)
7
11.3. Handling expression errors
Expression-related errors can occur during expression parsing or evaluation:
1exp = QgsExpression("1 + 1 = 2")
2if exp.hasParserError():
3 raise Exception(exp.parserErrorString())
4
5value = exp.evaluate()
6if exp.hasEvalError():
7 raise ValueError(exp.evalErrorString())