- PRQL Changelog
- 0.13.2
- 0.13.1
- 0.13.0 — 2024-07-25
- 0.12.2 — 2024-06-10
- 0.12.1 — 2024-06-09
- 0.12.0 — 2024-06-08
- 0.11.4 — 2024-02-25
- 0.11.3 — 2024-02-10
- 0.11.2 — 2024-02-07
- 0.11.1 — 2023-12-26
- 0.11.0 — 2023-12-19
- 0.10.1 — 2023-11-14
- 0.10.0 — 2023-10-26
- 0.9.5 — 2023-09-16
- 0.9.4 — 2023-08-24
- 0.9.3 — 2023-08-02
- 0.9.2 — 2023-07-25
- 0.9.1 — 2023-07-25
- 0.9.0 — 2023-07-24
- 0.8.1 — 2023-04-29
- 0.8.0 — 2023-04-14
- 0.7.1 — 2023-04-03
- 0.7.0 — 2023-04-01
- 0.6.1 — 2023-03-12
- 0.6.0 — 2023-03-08
- 0.5.2 — 2023-02-18
- 0.5.1 — 2023-02-17
- 0.5.0 — 2023-02-08
- 0.4.2 — 2023-01-25
- 0.4.1 — 2023-01-18
- 0.4.0 — 2023-01-15
- 0.3.1 - 2022-12-03
- 0.3.0 — 2022-11-29
- 0.2.11 — 2022-11-20
- 0.2.9 — 2022-10-14
- 0.2.8 — 2022-10-10
- 0.2.7 — 2022-09-17
- 0.2.6 — 2022-08-05
- 0.2.5 - 2022-07-29
- 0.2.4 - 2022-07-28
- 0.2.3 - 2022-07-24
- 0.2.2 - 2022-07-10
- 0.2.0 - 2022-06-27
PRQL Changelog
0.13.2
0.13.2 is a tiny release to fix an issue publishing 0.13.1 to crates.io.
0.13.1
0.13.1 is a small release containing a few bug fixes and improvements. Velocity has slowed down a bit in recent months, we’re still hoping to finish the new resolver and the new formatter in the near future.
It has 97 commits from 10 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
Add a option to the experimental documentation generator to output the docs in HTML format. The option is given using the
--format=html
option. (@vanillajonathan, 4791)The version of the library is now read from
git describe
. This doesn’t affect libraries built on git tags (such as our releases), only those built when developing. When reporting bugs, this helps identify the exact version. (@max-sixty & @m-span, #4804)
Fixes:
Raw strings (
r"..."
) are retained throughprqlc fmt
(@max-sixty, #4848)Strings containing an odd contiguous number of quotes are now delimited by an odd number of quotes when being formatted. The previous implementation would use an even number, which is invalid PRQL. (@max-sixty, #4850)
A few more keywords are quoted, such as
user
, which is a reserved keyword in PostgreSQL. (@max-sixty)
0.13.0 — 2024-07-25
0.13.0 brings a new debug logging framework, a big refactor of the parser, a new highlighter, an **
operator for exponentiation, a few bug fixes, and lots of other changes. It has 153 commits from 11 contributors.
Our work continues on rewriting the resolver and completing prqlc fmt
.
Selected changes:
Language:
Parentheses are always required around pipelines, even within tuples. For example:
from artists
# These parentheses are now required
derive {a=(b | math.abs)}
# No change — doesn't affect expressions or function calls without pipelines
derive {x = 3 + 4}
This is a small breaking change. The new behavior matches the existing documentation. (@max-sixty, #4775)
A new
**
operator for exponentiation. (@aljazerzen & @max-sixty, #4125)
Features:
prqlc compile --debug-log=log.html
will generate an HTML file with a detailed log of the compilation process. (@aljazerzen, #4646)- Added
prqlc debug json-schema
command to auto-generate JSON Schema representations of commonly exposed IR types such as PL and RQ. (@kgutwin, #4698) - Add documentation comments to the output of the documentation generator. (@vanillajonathan, #4729)
- Add CLI syntax highlighting to
prqlc
. You can try it asprqlc experimental highlight example.prql
. (@vanillajonathan, #4755)
Fixes:
- Using
in
with an empty array pattern (e.g.expr | in []
) will now output a constantfalse
condition instead of anexpr IN ()
, which is syntactically invalid in some SQL dialects (@Globidev, #4598)
Integrations:
- The Snap package previously released on the edge channel is now released on the stable channel. (@vanillajonathan, #4784)
Internal changes:
Major reorganization of
prqlc-parser
—prqlc-ast
is merged intoprqlc-parser
, andprqlc-parser
’s files are rearranged, including its exports. This is part of an effort to modularize the compiler by stage, reducing the amount of context that’s required to understand a single stage. There will likely be some further changes (more detail in the PR description). (@m-span, #4634)- This is a breaking change for any libraries that depend on
prqlc-parser
(which should be fairly rare).
- This is a breaking change for any libraries that depend on
Renamed
prql-compiler-macros
toprqlc-macros
for consistency with other crates (@max-sixty, #4565)prql-compiler
, the old name forprqlc
, is removed as a facade toprqlc
. It had been deprecated for a few versions and will no longer be updated. (@max-sixty)New benchmarks (@max-sixty, #4654)
New Contributors:
- @Globidev, with #4598
0.12.2 — 2024-06-10
0.12.2 is a very small release which renames prql-js
to prqlc-js
to match our standard naming scheme. Within node the package is imported as prqlc
.
It also fixes a mistake in the prqlc-python
release pipeline.
0.12.1 — 2024-06-09
0.12.1 is a tiny hotfix release which fixes how intra-prql crate dependencies were specified.
0.12.0 — 2024-06-08
0.12.0 contains a few months of smaller features. Our focus has been on rewriting the resolver, an effort that is still ongoing.
It has 239 commits from 12 contributors. Selected changes (most are not listed here, possibly we should be more conscientious about adding them…):
Features:
- Add
prqlc lex
command to the CLI (@max-sixty) - Add
prqlc debug lineage
command to the CLI, creating an expression lineage graph from a query (@kgutwin, #4533) - Initial implementation of an experimental documentation generator that generates Markdown documentation from
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan, #4152). - Join’s
side
parameter can take a reference that resolves to a literal (note: this is an experimental feature which may change in the future) (@kgutwin, #4499)
Fixes:
- Support expressions on left hand side of
std.in
operator. (@kgutwin, #4498) - Prevent panic for
from {}
andstd
(@m-span, #4538)
Web:
- The
browser
dist files are now built withwasm-pack
’sweb
target. As a result, they should be usable as ES Modules, through JS CDNs, and for example with Observable Framework (@srenatus, #4274).
Integrations:
- The syntax highlighter package for Sublime Text is now published (@vanillajonathan).
- The VSCode Great Icons icon pack extension shows a database icon for
.prql
files. (@EmmanuelBeziat) - Tokei, a source lines of code counter now has support for
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan) - Add syntax highlight file for the micro text editor. (@vanillajonathan)
New Contributors:
- @srenatus, with #4274
- @jacquayj, with #4332
- @pdelewski, with #4337
- @m-span, with #4422
- @kgutwin, with #4498
0.11.4 — 2024-02-25
0.11.4 is a hotfix release, fixing a CI issue that caused the CLI binaries to be built without the cli
feature.
0.11.3 — 2024-02-10
0.11.3 is a very small release, mostly a rename of the Python bindings.
The release has 13 commits from 4 contributors.
Internal changes:
- As part of making our names more consistent, the Python bindings are renamed.
prql-python
becomes a package published and importable asprqlc
. The internal Rust crate is namedprqlc-python
.
0.11.2 — 2024-02-07
0.11.2 contains lots of internal changes, lots of syntax highlighting, and the beginning of lutra
, a query runner.
This release has 122 commits from 9 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
- Initial implementation of
lutra
, a query runner. (@aljazerzen, #4182, #4174, #4134) prqlc fmt
works on projects with multiple files. (@max-sixty, #4028)
Fixes:
- Reduce stack memory usage (@aljazerzen, #4103)
Integrations:
- Add syntax highlight file for GtkSourceView. (@vanillajonathan, #4062)
- Add syntax highlight file for CotEditor. (@vanillajonathan)
- Add syntax highlight file for Sublime Text. (@vanillajonathan, #4127)
- sloc, a source lines of code counter now has support for
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan)
Internal changes:
prql-compiler
has been renamed toprqlc
, and we’ve established a more consistent naming scheme. The existing crate will still be published, re-exportingprqlc
, so no dependencies will break. A future version will add a deprecation warning.- The
prqlc-clib
crate was renamed toprqlc-c
, and associated artifacts were renamed. We’re trying to make names consistent (ideally for the final time!), and have a plan to rename some other bindings. (@max-sixty, #4077) - Add lots of whitespace items to the lexer, in preparation for the completion of
prqlc fmt
(@max-sixty, #4109, #4105) - Table declarations (@aljazerzen, #4126)
New Contributors:
- @kaspermarstal, with #4124
0.11.1 — 2023-12-26
0.11.1 fixes a couple of small bugs; it comes a few days after 0.11.
This release has 16 commits from 6 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
- Infer the type of array literals to be the union of types of its items. (@aljazerzen, #3989)
prql
module is added and theprql_version
function is renamed to theprql.version
function. The oldprql_version
function is deprecated and will be removed in the future release. (@eitsupi, #4006)
Fixes:
- Do not compile to
DISTINCT ON
whentake n
is used withgroup
for the targetsclickhouse
,duckdb
andpostgres
. (@PrettyWood, #3988) - Fix
take
n rows formssql
dialect by switching from TOP to FETCH (@PrettyWood, #3994)
0.11.0 — 2023-12-19
0.11.0 introduces new date
, text
& math
modules with lots of standard functions, including a new date.to_text
function. It contains a few bugs fixes, and lots of internal improvements to the compiler.
This release has 119 commits from 9 contributors. Selected changes:
Language:
- Breaking:
group
’sby
columns are now excluded from the partition. (#3490) - Breaking:
round
is now in themath
module and needs to be called viamath.round
. (#3928) - Breaking:
lower
andupper
are now in thetext
module and need to be called viatext.lower
andtext.upper
. (#3913, #3973)
Features:
- The
std.in
function now supports a list of values (@PrettyWood, #3883) - Most standard mathematical functions are now supported:
abs
,floor
,ceil
,pi
,exp
,ln
,log10
,log
,sqrt
,degrees
,radians
,cos
,acos
,sin
,asin
,tan
,atan
,pow
andround
.
Those functions are in themath
module (@PrettyWood, #3909, #3916 & 3928) - Most standard string functions are now supported:
ltrim
,rtrim
,trim
,length
,extract
,replace
. Utility functionsstarts_with
,contains
andends_with
are also available.
Those functions are in thetext
module (@PrettyWood, #3913, #3973) - Formatting a date to a text is now available for Clickhouse, DuckDB, MySQL, MSSQL and Postgres. A new
date
module has been added with theto_text
function (@PrettyWood, #3951, #3954 & #3955)
Fixes:
- Fix an issue with arithmetic precedence (@max-sixty, #3846)
+
and-
can be used after a cast (@PrettyWood, #3923)- The Lezer grammar had plenty of improvements and fixes. (@vanillajonathan)
Web:
- The Playground now uses Vite. (@vanillajonathan)
Internal changes:
- Bump
prql-compiler
’s MSRV to 1.70.0 (@eitsupi, #3876)
New Contributors:
- @PrettyWood, with #3883
0.10.1 — 2023-11-14
0.10.1 is a small release containing some internal fixes of the compiler.
This release has 36 commits from 7 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
- The
std.sql.read_csv
function and thestd.sql.read_parquet
function supports thesql.glaredb
target. (@eitsupi, #3749)
Fixes:
- Fix the bug of compiling to
DISTINCT ON
whentake 1
is used withgroup by
for the targetssql.clickhouse
,sql.duckdb
andsql.postgres
. (@aljazerzen, #3792)
Integrations:
- Enable integration tests for GlareDB. (@eitsupi, #3749)
- trapd00r/LS_COLORS, a collection of LS_COLORS definitions colorizes
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan) - vivid, a themeable LS_COLORS generator colorizes
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan) - colorls, displays
.prql
files with a database icon. (@vanillajonathan) - Emoji File Icons, a VS Code extension displays
.prql
files with a database emoji icon. (@vanillajonathan) - eza, a modern ls replacement colorizes
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan) - lsd, next gen ls command displays
.prql
files with a database icon. (@vanillajonathan)
0.10.0 — 2023-10-26
0.10.0 contains lots of small improvements, including support for new types of literal notation, support for read_*
functions in more dialects, playground improvements, and a better Lezer grammar (which we’re planning on using for a Jupyter extension).
This release has 155 commits from 9 contributors. Selected changes:
Language:
- Breaking: Case syntax now uses brackets
[]
rather than braces{}
. To convert previous PRQL queries to this new syntax simply changecase { ... }
tocase [ ... ]
. (@AaronMoat, #3517)
Features:
- Breaking: The
std.sql.read_csv
function is now compiled toread_csv
by default. Please set the targetsql.duckdb
to use the DuckDB’sread_csv_auto
function as previously. (@eitsupi, #3599) - Breaking: The
std.every
function is renamed tostd.all
(@aljazerzen, #3703) - The
std.sql.read_csv
function and thestd.sql.read_parquet
function supports thesql.clickhouse
target. (@eitsupi, #1533) - Add
std.prql_version
function to return PRQL version (@hulxv, #3533) - A new type
anytype
is added. (@aljazerzen, #3703) - Add support for hex escape sequences in strings. Example
"Hello \x51"
. (@vanillajonathan, #3568) - Add support for long Unicode escape sequences. Example
"Hello \u{01F422}"
. (@vanillajonathan, #3569) - Add support for binary numerical notation. Example
filter status == 0b1111000011110000
. (@vanillajonathan, #3661) - Add support for hexadecimal numerical notation. Example
filter status == 0xff
. (@vanillajonathan, #3654) - Add support for octal numerical notation. Example
filter status == 0o777
. (@vanillajonathan, #3672) - New compile target
sql.glaredb
for GlareDB and integration tests for it (However, there is a bug in the test and it is currently not running). (@universalmind303, @scsmithr, @eitsupi, #3669)
Web:
Allow cmd-/ (Mac) or ctrl-/ (Windows) to toggle comments in the playground editor (@AaronMoat, #3522)
Limit maximum height of the playground editor’s error panel to avoid taking over whole screen (@AaronMoat, #3524)
The playground now uses Vite (@vanillajonathan).
Integrations:
- Add a CLI command
prqlc collect
to collect a project’s modules into a single file (@aljazerzen, #3739) - Add a CLI command
prqlc debug expand-pl
to parse & and expand into PL without resolving (@aljazerzen, #3739) - Bump
prqlc
’s MSRV to 1.70.0 (@eitsupi, #3521) - Pygments, a syntax highlighting library now has syntax highlighting for PRQL. (@vanillajonathan, #3564)
- chroma, a syntax highlighting library written in Go and used by the static website generator Hugo. (@vanillajonathan, #3597)
- scc, a source lines of code counter now has support for
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan) - gcloc a source lines of code counter now has support for
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan) - cloc a source lines of code counter now has support for
.prql
files. (@AlDanial) - gocloc a source lines of code counter now has support for
.prql
files. (@vanillajonathan) - The Quarto VS Code extension supports editing PRQL code blocks (prqlr is required to render Quarto Markdown with PRQL code blocks). (@jjallaire)
Internal:
- Rename some of the internal crates, and refactored their paths in the repo. (@aljazerzen, #3683).
- Add a
justfile
for developers who prefer that above ourTaskfile.yaml
(@aljazerzen, #3681)
New Contributors:
- @hulxv, with #3533
- @AaronMoat, with #3522
- @jangorecki, with #3634
0.9.5 — 2023-09-16
0.9.5 adds a line-wrapping character, fixes a few bugs, and improves our CI. The release has 77 commits from 8 contributors. Selected changes are below.
Look out for some conference talks coming up over the next few weeks, including QCon SF on Oct 2 and date2day on Oct 12.
Language:
A new line-wrapping character, for lines that are long and we want to break up into multiple physical lines. This is slightly different from from many languages — it’s on the subsequent line:
from artists
select is_europe =
\ country == "DE"
\ || country == "FR"
\ || country == "ES"
This allows for easily commenting out physical lines while maintaining a correct logical line; for example:
from artists
select is_europe =
\ country == "DE"
\ || country == "FR"
\ || country == "FR"
-\ || country == "ES"
+#\ || country == "ES"
(@max-sixty, #3408)
Fixes:
Fix stack overflow on very long queries in Windows debug builds (@max-sixty, #2908)
Fix panic when unresolved lineage appears in group or window (@davidot, #3266)
Fix a corner-case in handling precedence, and remove unneeded parentheses in some outputs (@max-sixty, #3472)
Web:
- Compiler panics are now printed to the console (@max-sixty, #3446)
Integrations:
- Ace, the JavaScript code editor now has syntax highlighting for PRQL. (@vanillajonathan, #3493)
Internal changes:
- Simplify & speed up lexer (@max-sixty, #3426, #3418)
New Contributors:
- @davidot, with #3450
0.9.4 — 2023-08-24
0.9.4 is a small release with some improvements and bug fixes in the compiler and prqlc
. And, the documentation and CI are continually being improved.
This release has 110 commits from 9 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
- Strings can be delimited with any odd number of quote characters. The logic for lexing quotes is now simpler and slightly faster. Escapes in single-quote-delimited strings escape single-quotes rather than double-quotes. (@max-sixty, #3274)
Fixes:
- S-strings within double braces now parse correctly (@max-sixty, #3265)
Documentation:
- New docs for strings (@max-sixty, #3281)
Web:
- Improve syntax highlighting for numbers in the book & website (@max-sixty, #3261)
- Add ClickHouse integration to docs (@max-sixty, #3251)
Integrations:
prqlc
no longer displays a prompt when piping a query into its stdin (@max-sixty, #3248).- Add a minimal example for use
prql-lib
with Zig (@vanillajonathan, #3372)
Internal changes:
Overhaul our CI to run a cohesive set of tests depending on the specific changes in the PR, and elide all others. This cuts CI latency to less than three minutes for most changes, and enables GitHub’s auto-merge to wait for all relevant tests. It also reduces the CI time on merging to main, by moving some tests to only run on specific path changes or on our nightly run.
We now have one label we can add to PRs to run more tests —
pr-nightly
. (@max-sixty, #3317 & others).Auto-merge PRs for backports or pre-commit updates (@max-sixty, #3246)
Add a workflow to create an issue when the scheduled nightly workflow fails (@max-sixty, #3304)
New Contributors:
- @FinnRG, with #3292
- @sitiom, with #3353
0.9.3 — 2023-08-02
0.9.3 is a small release, with mostly documentation, internal, and CI changes.
This release has 85 commits from 10 contributors.
We’d like to welcome @not-my-profile as someone who has helped with lots of internal refactoring in the past couple of weeks.
New Contributors:
- @vthriller, with #3171
- @postmeback, with #3216
0.9.2 — 2023-07-25
0.9.2 is a hotfix release to fix an issue in the 0.9.0 & 0.9.1 release pipelines.
0.9.1 — 2023-07-25
0.9.1 is a hotfix release to fix an issue in the 0.9.0 release pipeline.
0.9.0 — 2023-07-24
0.9.0 is probably PRQL’s biggest ever release. We have dialect-specific standard-libraries, a regex operator, an initial implementation of multiple-file projects & modules, lots of bug fixes, and many many internal changes.
We’ve made a few backward incompatible syntax changes. Most queries will work with a simple find/replace; see below for details.
The release has 421 commits from 12 contributors.
A small selection of the changes:
Language:
The major breaking change is a new syntax for lists, which have been renamed to tuples, and are now represented with braces
{}
rather than brackets[]
.To convert previous PRQL queries to this new syntax simply change
[ ... ]
to{ ... }
.We made the syntax change to incorporate arrays. Almost every major language uses
[]
for arrays. We are adopting that convention — arrays use[]
, tuples will use{}
. (Though we recognize that{}
for tuples is also rare (Hi, Erlang!), but didn’t want to further load parentheses with meaning.)Arrays are conceptually similar to columns — their elements have a single type. Array syntax can’t contain assignments.
As part of this, we’ve also formalized tuples as containing both individual items (
select {foo, baz}
), and assignments (select {foo=bar, baz=fuz}
).Some significant changes regarding SQL dialects:
- Operators and functions can be defined on per-dialect basis. (@aljazerzen, #2681)
- Breaking: The
sql.duckdb
target supports DuckDB 0.8 (@eitsupi, #2810). - Breaking: The
sql.hive
target is removed (@eitsupi, #2837).
New arithmetic operators. These compile to different function or operator depending on the target.
Breaking: Operator
/
now always performs floating division (@aljazerzen, #2684). See the Division docs for details.Truncated integer division operator
//
(@aljazerzen, #2684). See the Division docs for details.Regex search operator
~=
(@max-sixty, #2458). An example:from tracks
filter (name ~= "Love")
…compiles to;
SELECT
*
FROM
tracks
WHERE
REGEXP(name, 'Love')
…though the exact form differs by dialect; see the Regex docs for more details.
New aggregation functions:
every
,any
,average
, andconcat_array
. Breaking: Removeavg
in favor ofaverage
.Breaking: We’ve changed our function declaration syntax to match other declarations. Functions were one of the first language constructs in PRQL, and since then we’ve added normal declarations there’s no compelling reason for functions to be different.
let add = a b -> a + b
Previously, this was:
func add a b -> a + b
Experimental modules, which allow importing declarations from other files. Docs are forthcoming.
Relation literals create a relation (a “table”) as an array of tuples. This example demonstrates the new syntax for arrays
[]
and tuples{}
. (@aljazerzen, #2605)from [{a=5, b=false}, {a=6, b=true}]
filter b == true
select a
this
can be used to refer to the current pipeline, for situations where plain column name would be ambiguous:from x
derive sum = my_column
select this.sum # does not conflict with `std.sum`
Within a
join
transform, there is also a reference to the right relation:that
.Breaking: functions
count
,rank
androw_number
now require an argument of the array to operate on. In most cases you can directly replacecount
withcount this
. Thenon_null
argument ofcount
has been removed.
Features:
We’ve changed how we handle colors.
Options::color
is deprecated and has no effect. Code which consumesprql_compiler::compile
should instead accept the output with colors and use a library such asanstream
to handle the presentation of colors. To ensure minimal disruption,prql_compiler
will currently strip color codes when a standard environment variable such asCLI_COLOR=0
is set or when it detectsstderr
is not a TTY.We now use the anstream library in
prqlc
&prql-compiler
.(@max-sixty, #2773)
prqlc
can now show backtraces when the standard backtrace env var (RUST_BACKTRACE
) is active. (@max-sixty, #2751)
Fixes:
- Numbers expressed with scientific notation —
1e9
— are now handled correctly by the compiler (@max-sixty, #2865).
Integrations:
- prql-python now provides type hints (@philpep, #2912)
Internal changes:
Annotations in PRQL. These have limited support but are currently used to specify binding strengths. They’re modeled after Rust’s annotations, but with
@
syntax, more similar to traditional decorators. (#2729)@{binding_strength=11}
let mod = l r -> s"{l} % {r}"
Remove BigQuery’s special handling of quoted identifiers, now that our module system handles its semantics (@max-sixty, #2609).
ClickHouse is tested in CI (@eitsupi, #2815).
New Contributors:
- @maxmcd, with #2533
- @khoa165, with #2876
- @philpep, with #2912
- @not-my-profile, with #2971
0.8.1 — 2023-04-29
0.8.1 is a small release with a new list-targets
command in prqlc
, some documentation improvements, and some internal improvements.
This release has 41 commits from 8 contributors.
From the broader perspective of the project, we’re increasing the relative prioritization of it being easy for folks to actually use PRQL — either with existing tools, or a tool we’d build. We’ll be thinking about & discussing the best way to do that over the next few weeks.
0.8.0 — 2023-04-14
0.8.0 renames the and
& or
operators to &&
& ||
respectively, reorganizes the Syntax section in the book, and introduces read_parquet
& read_csv
functions for reading files with DuckDB.
This release has 38 commits from 8 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
Rename
and
to&&
andor
to||
. Operators which are symbols are now consistently infix, while “words” are now consistently functions (@aljazerzen, #2422).New functions
read_parquet
andread_csv
, which mirror the DuckDB functions, instructing the database to read from files (@max-sixty, #2409).
0.7.1 — 2023-04-03
0.7.1 is a hotfix release to fix prql-js
’s npm install
behavior when being installed as a dependency.
This release has 17 commits from 4 contributors.
0.7.0 — 2023-04-01
0.7.0 is a fairly small release in terms of new features, with lots of internal improvements, such as integration tests with a whole range of DBs, a blog post on Pi day, RFCs for a type system, and more robust language bindings.
There’s a very small breaking change to the Rust API, hence the minor version bump.
Here’s our April 2023 Update, from our Readme:
April 2023 update
PRQL is being actively developed by a growing community. It’s ready to use by the intrepid, either as part of one of our supported extensions, or within your own tools, using one of our supported language bindings.
PRQL still has some minor bugs and some missing features, and probably is only ready to be rolled out to non-technical teams for fairly simple queries.
Here’s our current Roadmap and our Milestones.
Our immediate focus for the code is on:
- Building out the next few big features, including types and modules.
- Ensuring our supported features feel extremely robust; resolving any priority bugs.
We’re also spending time thinking about:
- Making it really easy to start using PRQL. We’re doing that by building integrations with tools that folks already use; for example our VS Code extension & Jupyter integration. If there are tools you’re familiar with that you think would be open to integrating with PRQL, please let us know in an issue.
- Making it easier to contribute to the compiler. We have a wide group of contributors to the project, but contributions to the compiler itself are quite concentrated. We’re keen to expand this; #1840 for feedback.
The release has 131 commits from 10 contributors. Particular credit goes to to @eitsupi & @jelenkee, who have made significant contributions, and @vanillajonathan, whose prolific contribution include our growing language bindings.
A small selection of the changes:
Features:
prqlc compile
adds--color
&--include-signature-comment
options. (@max-sixty, #2267)
Web:
- Added the PRQL snippets from the book to the Playground (@jelenkee, #2197)
Internal changes:
- Breaking: The
compile
function’sOptions
now includes acolor
member, which determines whether error messages use ANSI color codes. This is technically a breaking change to the API. (@max-sixty, #2251) - The
Error
struct now exposes theMessageKind
enum. (@vanillajonathan, #2307) - Integration tests run in CI with DuckDB, SQLite, PostgreSQL, MySQL and SQL Server (@jelenkee, #2286)
New Contributors:
- @k-nut, with #2294
0.6.1 — 2023-03-12
0.6.1 is a small release containing an internal refactoring and improved bindings for C, PHP & .NET.
This release has 54 commits from 6 contributors. Selected changes:
Fixes:
- No longer incorrectly compile to
DISTINCT
when atake 1
refers to a different set of columns than are in thegroup
. (@max-sixty, with thanks to @cottrell, #2109) - The version specification of the dependency Chumsky was bumped from
0.9.0
to0.9.2
.0.9.0
has a bug that causes an infinite loop. (@eitsupi, #2110)
Documentation:
- Add a policy for which bindings are supported / unsupported / nascent. See https://prql-lang.org/book/project/bindings/index.html for more details (@max-sixty, #2062) (@max-sixty, #2062)
Integrations:
- [prql-lib] Added C++ header file. (@vanillajonathan, #2126)
Internal changes:
- Many of the items that were in the root of the repo have been aggregated into
web
&bindings
, simplifying the repo’s structure. There’s alsogrammars
&packages
(@max-sixty, #2135, #2117, #2121).
0.6.0 — 2023-03-08
0.6.0 introduces a rewritten parser, giving us the ability to dramatically improve error messages, renames switch
to case
and includes lots of minor improvements and fixes. It also introduces loop
, which compiles to WITH RECURSIVE
, as a highly experimental feature.
There are a few cases of breaking changes, including switching switch
to case
, in case that’s confusing. There are also some minor parsing changes outlined below.
This release has 108 commits from 11 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
Add a (highly experimental)
loop
language feature, which translates toWITH RECURSIVE
. We expect changes and refinements in upcoming releases. (#1642, @aljazerzen)Rename the experimental
switch
function tocase
given it more closely matches the traditional semantics ofcase
. (@max-sixty, #2036)Change the
case
syntax to use=>
instead of->
to distinguish it from function syntax.Convert parser from pest to Chumsky (@aljazerzen, #1818)
- Improved error messages, and the potential to make even better in the future. Many of these improvements come from error recovery.
- String escapes (
\n \t
). - Raw strings that don’t escape backslashes.
- String interpolations can only contain identifiers and not any expression.
- Operator associativity has been changed from right-to-left to left-to-right to be more similar to other conventional languages.
and
now has a higher precedence thanor
(of same reason as the previous point).- Dates, times and timestamps have stricter parsing rules.
let
,func
,prql
,case
are now treated as keywords.- Float literals without fraction part are not allowed anymore (
1.
).
Add a
--format
option toprqlc parse
which can return the AST in YAML (@max-sixty, #1962)Add a new subcommand
prqlc jinja
. (@aljazerzen, #1722)Breaking: prql-compiler no longer passes text containing
{{
&}}
through to the output. (@aljazerzen, #1722)For example, the following PRQL query
from {{foo}}
was compiled to the following SQL previously, but now it raises an error.
SELECT
*
FROM
{{ foo }}
This pass-through feature existed for integration with dbt.
We’re again considering how to best integrate with dbt, and this change is based on the idea that the jinja macro should run before the PRQL compiler.
If you’re interested in dbt integration, subscribe or 👍 to https://github.com/dbt-labs/dbt-core/pull/5982.
A new compile target
"sql.any"
. When"sql.any"
is used as the target of the compile function’s option, the target contained in the query header will be used. (@aljazerzen, #1995)Support for SQL parameters with similar syntax (#1957, @aljazerzen)
Allow
:
to be elided in timezones, such as0800
in@2020-01-01T13:19:55-0800
(@max-sixty, #1991).Add
std.upper
andstd.lower
functions for changing string casing (@Jelenkee, #2019).
Fixes:
prqlc compile
returns a non-zero exit code for invalid queries. (@max-sixty, #1924)- Identifiers can contain any alphabetic unicode characters (@max-sixty, #2003)
Documentation:
- Operator precedence (@aljazerzen, #1818)
- Error messages for invalid queries are displayed in the book (@max-sixty, #2015)
Integrations:
- [prql-php] Added PHP bindings. (@vanillajonathan, #1860)
- [prql-dotnet] Added .NET bindings. (@vanillajonathan, #1917)
- [prql-lib] Added C header file. (@vanillajonathan, #1879)
- Added a workflow building a
.deb
on each release. (Note that it’s not yet published on each release). (@vanillajonathan, #1883) - Added a workflow building a
.rpm
on each release. (Note that it’s not yet published on each release). (@vanillajonathan, #1918) - Added a workflow building a Snap package on each release. (@vanillajonathan, #1881)
Internal changes:
- Test that the output of our nascent autoformatter can be successfully compiled into SQL. Failing examples are now clearly labeled. (@max-sixty, #2016)
- Definition files have been added to configure Dev Containers for Rust development environment. (@eitsupi, #1893, #2025, #2028)
New Contributors:
- @linux-china, with #1971
- @Jelenkee, with #2019
0.5.2 — 2023-02-18
0.5.2 is a tiny release to fix an build issue in yesterday’s prql-js
0.5.1 release.
This release has 7 commits from 2 contributors.
New Contributors:
- @matthias-Q, with #1873
0.5.1 — 2023-02-17
0.5.1 contains a few fixes, and another change to how bindings handle default target / dialects.
This release has 53 commits from 7 contributors. Selected changes:
Fixes:
- Delegate dividing literal integers to the DB. Previously integer division was executed during PRQL compilation, which could be confusing given that behavior is different across DBs. Other arithmetic operations are still executed during compilation. (@max-sixty, #1747)
Documentation:
- Add docs on the
from_text
transform (@max-sixty, #1756)
Integrations:
- [prql-js] Default compile target changed from
Sql(Generic)
toSql(None)
. (@eitsupi, #1856) - [prql-python] Compilation options can now be specified from Python. (@eitsupi, #1807)
- [prql-python] Default compile target changed from
Sql(Generic)
toSql(None)
. (@eitsupi, #1861)
New Contributors:
- @vanillajonathan, with #1766
0.5.0 — 2023-02-08
0.5.0 contains a few fixes, some improvements to bindings, lots of docs improvements, and some work on forthcoming features. It contains one breaking change in the compiler’s Options
interface.
This release has 74 commits from 12 contributors. Selected changes:
Features:
Change public API to use target instead of dialect in preparation for feature work (@aljazerzen, #1684)
prqlc watch
command which watches filesystem for changes and compiles .prql files to .sql (@aljazerzen, #1708)
Fixes:
- Support double brackets in s-strings which aren’t symmetric (@max-sixty, #1650)
- Support Postgres’s Interval syntax (@max-sixty, #1649)
- Fixed tests for
prql-elixir
with macOS (@kasvith, #1707)
Documentation:
- Add a documentation test for prql-compiler, update prql-compiler README, and include the README in the prql book section for Rust bindings. The code examples in the README are included and tested as doctests in the prql-compiler (@nkicg6, #1679)
Internal changes:
- Add tests for all PRQL website examples to prql-python to ensure compiled results match expected SQL (@nkicg6, #1719)
New Contributors:
- @ruslandoga, with #1628
- @RalfNorthman, with #1632
- @nicot, with #1662
0.4.2 — 2023-01-25
Features:
New
from_text format-arg string-arg
function that supports JSON and CSV formats. format-arg can beformat:csv
orformat:json
. string-arg can be a string in any format. (@aljazerzen & @snth, #1514)from_text format:csv """
a,b,c
1,2,3
4,5,6
"""
from_text format:json '''
[{"a": 1, "b": "x", "c": false }, {"a": 4, "b": "y", "c": null }]
'''
from_text format:json '''{
"columns": ["a", "b", "c"],
"data": [
[1, "x", false],
[4, "y", null]
]
}'''
For now, the argument is limited to string constants.
Fixes
- Export constructor for SQLCompileOptions (@bcho, #1621)
- Remove backticks in count_distinct (@aljazerzen, #1611)
New Contributors
- @1Kinoti, with #1596
- @veenaamb, with #1614
0.4.1 — 2023-01-18
0.4.1 comes a few days after 0.4.0, with a couple of features and the release of prqlc
, the CLI crate.
0.4.1 has 35 commits from 6 contributors.
Features:
Inferred column names include the relation name (@aljazerzen, #1550):
from albums
select title # name used to be inferred as title only
select albums.title # so using albums was not possible here
Quoted identifiers such as
dir/*.parquet
are passed through to SQL. (@max-sixty, #1516).The CLI is installed with
cargo install prqlc
. The binary was renamed in 0.4.0 but required an additional--features
flag, which has been removed in favor of this new crate (@max-sixty & @aljazerzen, #1549).
New Contributors:
- @fool1280, with #1554
- @nkicg6, with #1567
0.4.0 — 2023-01-15
0.4.0 brings lots of new features including case
, select ![]
and numbers with underscores. We have initial (unpublished) bindings to Elixir. And there’s the usual improvements to fixes & documentation (only a minority are listed below in this release).
0.4.0 also has some breaking changes: table
is let
, dialect
is renamed to target
, and the compiler’s API has changed. Full details below.
Features:
Defining a temporary table is now expressed as
let
rather thantable
(@aljazerzen, #1315). See the tables docs for details.Experimental: The case function sets a variable to a value based on one of several expressions (@aljazerzen, #1278).
derive var = case [
score <= 10 -> "low",
score <= 30 -> "medium",
score <= 70 -> "high",
true -> "very high",
]
…compiles to:
SELECT
*,
CASE
WHEN score <= 10 THEN 'low'
WHEN score <= 30 THEN 'medium'
WHEN score <= 70 THEN 'high'
ELSE 'very high'
END AS var
FROM
bar
Check out the case docs for more details.
Experimental: Columns can be excluded by name with
select
(@aljazerzen, #1329)from albums
select ![title, composer]
Experimental:
append
transform, equivalent toUNION ALL
in SQL. (@aljazerzen, #894)from employees
append managers
Check out the append docs for more details.
Numbers can contain underscores, which can make reading long numbers easier (@max-sixty, #1467):
from numbers
select {
small = 1.000_000_1,
big = 5_000_000,
}
The SQL output contains a comment with the PRQL compiler version (@aljazerzen, #1322)
dialect
is renamed totarget
, and its values are prefixed withsql.
(@max-sixty, #1388); for example:prql target:sql.bigquery # previously was `dialect:bigquery`
from employees
This gives us the flexibility to target other languages than SQL in the long term.
Tables definitions can contain a bare s-string (@max-sixty, #1422), which enables us to include a full CTE of SQL, for example:
let grouping = s"""
SELECT SUM(a)
FROM tbl
GROUP BY
GROUPING SETS
((b, c, d), (d), (b, d))
"""
Ranges supplied to
in
can be half-open (@aljazerzen, #1330).The crate’s external API has changed to allow for compiling to intermediate representation. This also affects bindings. See prql-compiler docs for more details.
Fixes:
[This release, the changelog only contains a subset of fixes]
- Allow interpolations in table s-strings (@aljazerzen, #1337)
Documentation:
[This release, the changelog only contains a subset of documentation improvements]
- Add docs on aliases in Select
- Add JS template literal and multiline example (@BCsabaEngine, #1432)
- JS template literal and multiline example (@BCsabaEngine, #1432)
- Improve prql-compiler docs & examples (@aljazerzen, #1515)
- Fix string highlighting in book (@max-sixty, #1264)
Web:
- The playground allows querying some sample data. As before, the result updates on every keystroke. (@aljazerzen, #1305)
Integrations:
[This release, the changelog only contains a subset of integration improvements]
- Added Elixir integration exposing PRQL functions as NIFs (#1500, @kasvith)
- Exposed Elixir flavor with exceptions (#1513, @kasvith)
- Rename
prql-compiler
binary toprqlc
(@aljazerzen #1515)
Internal changes:
[This release, the changelog only contains a subset of internal changes]
- Add parsing for negative select (@max-sixty, #1317)
- Allow for additional builtin functions (@aljazerzen, #1325)
- Add an automated check for typos (@max-sixty, #1421)
- Add tasks for running playground & book (@max-sixty, #1265)
- Add tasks for running tests on every file change (@max-sixty, #1380)
New contributors:
- @EArazli, with #1359
- @boramalper, with #1362
- @allurefx, with #1377
- @bcho, with #1375
- @JettChenT, with #1385
- @BlurrechDev, with #1411
- @BCsabaEngine, with #1432
- @kasvith, with #1500
0.3.1 - 2022-12-03
0.3.1 brings a couple of small improvements and fixes.
Features:
Support for using s-strings for
from
(#1197, @aljazerzen)from s"SELECT * FROM employees WHERE foo > 5"
Helpful error message when referencing a table in an s-string (#1203, @aljazerzen)
Fixes:
- Multiple columns with same name created (#1211, @aljazerzen)
- Renaming via select breaks preceding sorting (#1204, @aljazerzen)
- Same column gets selected multiple times (#1186, @mklopets)
Internal:
- Update Github Actions and Workflows to current version numbers (and avoid using Node 12)
0.3.0 — 2022-11-29
🎉 0.3.0 is the biggest ever change in PRQL’s compiler, rewriting much of the internals: the compiler now has a semantic understanding of expressions, including resolving names & building a DAG of column lineage 🎉.
While the immediate changes to the language are modest — some long-running bugs are fixed — this unlocks the development of many of the project’s long-term priorities, such as type-checking & auto-complete. And it simplifies the building of our next language features, such as match-case expressions, unions & table expressions.
@aljazerzen has (mostly single-handedly) done this work over the past few months. The project owes him immense appreciation.
Breaking changes:
We’ve had to make some modest breaking changes for 0.3:
Pipelines must start with
from
. For example, a pipeline with onlyderive foo = 5
, with nofrom
transform, is no longer valid. Depending on demand for this feature, it would be possible to add this back.Shared column names now require
==
in a join. The existing approach is ambiguous to the compiler —id
in the following example could be a boolean column.from employees
-join positions [id]
+join positions [==id]
Table references containing periods must be surrounded by backticks. For example, when referencing a schema name:
-from public.sometable
+from `public.sometable`
Features:
- Change self equality op to
==
(#1176, @aljazerzen) - Add logging (@aljazerzen)
- Add clickhouse dialect (#1090, @max-sixty)
- Allow namespaces & tables to contain
.
(#1079, @aljazerzen)
Fixes:
- Deduplicate column appearing in
SELECT
multiple times (#1186, @aljazerzen) - Fix uppercase table names (#1184, @aljazerzen)
- Omit table name when only one ident in SELECT (#1094, @aljazerzen)
Documentation:
- Add chapter on semantics’ internals (@aljazerzen, #1028)
- Add note about nesting variables in s-strings (@max-sixty, #1163)
Internal changes:
- Flatten group and window (#1120, @aljazerzen)
- Split ast into expr and stmt (@aljazerzen)
- Refactor associativity (#1156, @aljazerzen)
- Rename Ident constructor to
from_name
(#1084, @aljazerzen) - Refactor rq folding (#1177, @aljazerzen)
- Add tests for reported bugs fixes in semantic (#1174, @aljazerzen)
- Bump duckdb from 0.5.0 to 0.6.0 (#1132)
- Bump once_cell from 1.15.0 to 1.16.0 (#1101)
- Bump pest from 2.4.0 to 2.5.0 (#1161)
- Bump pest_derive from 2.4.0 to 2.5.0 (#1179)
- Bump sqlparser from 0.25.0 to 0.27.0 (#1131)
- Bump trash from 2.1.5 to 3.0.0 (#1178)
0.2.11 — 2022-11-20
0.2.11 contains a few helpful fixes.
Work continues on our semantic
refactor — look out for 0.3.0 soon! Many thanks to @aljazerzen for his continued contributions to this.
Note: 0.2.10 was skipped due to this maintainer’s inability to read his own docs on bumping versions…
Features:
- Detect when compiler version is behind query version (@MarinPostma, #1058)
- Add
__version__
to prql-python package (@max-sixty, #1034)
Fixes:
- Fix nesting of expressions with equal binding strength and left associativity, such as
a - (b - c)
(@max-sixty, #1136) - Retain floats without significant digits as floats (@max-sixty, #1141)
Documentation:
- Add documentation of
prqlr
bindings (@eitsupi, #1091) - Add a ‘Why PRQL’ section to the website (@max-sixty, #1098)
- Add @snth to core-devs (@max-sixty, #1050)
Internal changes:
- Use workspace versioning (@max-sixty, #1065)
0.2.9 — 2022-10-14
0.2.9 is a small release containing a bug fix for empty strings.
Fixes:
- Fix parsing of empty strings (@aljazerzen, #1024)
0.2.8 — 2022-10-10
0.2.8 is another modest release with some fixes, doc improvements, bindings improvements, and lots of internal changes. Note that one of the fixes causes the behavior of round
and cast
to change slightly — though it’s handled as a fix rather than a breaking change in semantic versioning.
Fixes:
Change order of the
round
&cast
function parameters to have the column last; for exampleround 2 foo_col
/cast int foo
. This is consistent with other functions, and makes piping possible:derive [
gross_salary = (salary + payroll_tax | as int),
gross_salary_rounded = (gross_salary | round 0),
]
Documentation:
- Split
DEVELOPMENT.md
fromCONTRIBUTING.md
(@richb-hanover, #1010) - Make s-strings more prominent in website intro (@max-sixty, #982)
Web:
- Add GitHub star count to website (@max-sixty, #990)
Integrations:
- Expose a shortened error message, in particular for the VS Code extension (@aljazerzen, #1005)
Internal changes:
- Specify 1.60.0 as minimum Rust version (@max-sixty, #1011)
- Remove old
wee-alloc
code (@max-sixty, #1013) - Upgrade clap to version 4 (@aj-bagwell, #1004)
- Improve book-building script in Taskfile (@max-sixty, #989)
- Publish website using an artifact rather than a long-lived branch (@max-sixty, #1009)
0.2.7 — 2022-09-17
0.2.7 is a fairly modest release, six weeks after 0.2.6. We have some more significant features, including a union
operator and an overhaul of our type system, as open PRs which will follow in future releases.
We also have new features in the VS Code extension, courtesy of @jiripospisil, including a live output panel.
Fixes:
range_of_ranges
checks the Range end is smaller than its start (@shuozeli, #946)
Documentation:
- Improve various docs (@max-sixty, #974, #971, #972, #970, #925)
- Add reference to EdgeDB’s blog post in our FAQ (@max-sixty, #922)
- Fix typos (@kianmeng, #943)
Integrations:
- Add
prql-lib
, enabling language bindings withgo
(@sigxcpu76, #923) - Fix line numbers in JS exceptions (@charlie-sanders, #929)
Internal changes:
- Lock the version of the rust-toolchain, with auto-updates (@max-sixty, #926, #927)
0.2.6 — 2022-08-05
Fixes:
- Adjust
fmt
to only escape names when needed (@aljazerzen, #907) - Fix quoting on upper case
table
names (@max-sixty, #893) - Fix scoping of identical column names from multiple tables (@max-sixty, #908)
- Fix parse error on newlines in a
table
(@sebastiantoh 🆕, #902) - Fix quoting of upper case table names (@max-sixty, #893)
Documentation:
- Add docs on Architecture (@aljazerzen, #904)
- Add Changelog (@max-sixty, #890 #891)
Internal changes:
- Start trial using Conventional Commits (@max-sixty, #889)
- Add crates.io release workflow, docs (@max-sixty, #887)
0.2.5 - 2022-07-29
0.2.5 is a very small release following 0.2.4 yesterday. It includes:
- Add the ability to represent single brackets in an s-string, with two brackets (#752, @max-sixty)
- Fix the “Copy to Clipboard” command in the Playground, for Firefox (#880, @mklopets)
0.2.4 - 2022-07-28
0.2.4 is a small release following 0.2.3 a few days ago. The 0.2.4 release includes:
- Enrich our CLI, adding commands to get different stages of the compilation process (@aljazerzen , #863)
- Fix multiple
take n
statements in a query, leading to duplicate proxy columns in generated SQL (@charlie-sanders) - Fix BigQuery quoting of identifiers in
SELECT
statements (@max-sixty) - Some internal changes — reorganize top-level functions (@aljazerzen), add a workflow to track our Rust compilation time (@max-sixty), simplify our simple prql-to-sql tests (@max-sixty)
Thanks to @ankane, prql-compiler
is now available from homebrew core; brew install prql-compiler
1.
1
we still need to update docs and add a release workflow for this:
<https://github.com/PRQL/prql/issues/866>
0.2.3 - 2022-07-24
A couple of weeks since the 0.2.2 release: we’ve squashed a few bugs, added some mid-sized features to the language, and made a bunch of internal improvements.
The 0.2.3 release includes:
- Allow for escaping otherwise-invalid identifiers (@aljazerzen & @max-sixty)
- Fix a bug around operator precedence (@max-sixty)
- Add a section the book on the language bindings (@charlie-sanders)
- Add tests for our
Display
representation while fixing some existing bugs. This is gradually becoming our code formatter (@arrizalamin) - Add a “copy to clipboard” button in the Playground (@mklopets)
- Add lots of guidance to our
CONTRIBUTING.md
around our tests and process for merging (@max-sixty) - Add a
prql!
macro for parsing a prql query at compile time (@aljazerzen) - Add tests for
prql-js
(@charlie-sanders) - Add a
from_json
method for transforming json to a PRQL string (@arrizalamin) - Add a workflow to release
prql-java
to Maven (@doki23) - Enable running all tests from a PR by adding a
pr-run-all-tests
label (@max-sixty) - Have
cargo-release
to bump all crate & npm versions (@max-sixty) - Update
prql-js
to use the bundler build ofprql-js
(@mklopets)
As well as those contribution changes, thanks to those who’ve reported issues, such as @mklopets @huw @mm444 @ajfriend.
From here, we’re planning to continue squashing bugs (albeit more minor than those in this release), adding some features like union
, while working on bigger issues such as type-inference.
We’re also going to document and modularize the compiler further. It’s important that we give more people an opportunity to contribute to the guts of PRQL, especially given the number and enthusiasm of contributions to project in general — and it’s not that easy to do so at the moment. While this is ongoing if anyone has something they’d like to work on in the more difficult parts of the compiler, let us know on GitHub or Discord, and we’d be happy to work together on it.
Thank you!
0.2.2 - 2022-07-10
We’re a couple of weeks since our 0.2.0 release. Thanks for the surge in interest and contributions! 0.2.2 has some fixes & some internal improvements:
- We now test against SQLite & DuckDB on every commit, to ensure we’re producing correct SQL. (@aljazerzen)
- We have the beginning of Java bindings! (@doki23)
- Idents surrounded by backticks are passed through to SQL (@max-sixty)
- More examples on homepage; e.g.
join
&window
, lots of small docs improvements - Automated releases to homebrew (@roG0d)
- prql-js is now a single package for Node, browsers & webpack (@charlie-sanders)
- Parsing has some fixes, including
>=
and leading underscores in idents (@mklopets) - Ranges receive correct syntax highlighting (@max-sixty)
Thanks to Aljaž Mur Eržen @aljazerzen , George Roldugin @roldugin , Jasper McCulloch @Jaspooky , Jie Han @doki23 , Marko Klopets @mklopets , Maximilian Roos @max-sixty , Rodrigo Garcia @roG0d , Ryan Russell @ryanrussell , Steven Maude @StevenMaude , Charlie Sanders @charlie-sanders .
We’re planning to continue collecting bugs & feature requests from users, as well as working on some of the bigger features, like type-inference.
For those interesting in joining, we also have a new Contributing page.
0.2.0 - 2022-06-27
🎉 🎉 After several months of building, PRQL is ready to use! 🎉 🎉
How we got here:
At the end of January, we published a proposal of a better language for data transformation: PRQL. The reception was better than I could have hoped for — we were no. 2 on HackerNews for a day, and gained 2.5K GitHub stars over the next few days.
But man cannot live on GitHub Stars alone — we had to do the work to build it. So over the next several months, during many evenings & weekends, a growing group of us gradually built the compiler, evolved the language, and wrote some integrations.
We want to double-down on the community and its roots in open source — it’s incredible that a few of us from all over the globe have collaborated on a project without ever having met. We decided early-on that PRQL would always be open-source and would never have a commercial product (despite lots of outside interest to fund a seed round!). Because languages are so deep in the stack, and the data stack has so many players, the best chance of building a great language is to build an open language.
We still have a long way to go. While PRQL is usable, it has lots of missing features, and an incredible amount of unfulfilled potential, including a language server, cohesion with databases, and type inference. Over the coming weeks, we’d like to grow the number of intrepid users experimenting PRQL in their projects, prioritize features that will unblock them, and then start fulfilling PRQL’s potential by working through our roadmap.
The best way to experience PRQL is to try it. Check out our website and the Playground. Start using PRQL for your own projects in dbt, Jupyter notebooks and Prefect workflows.
Keep in touch with PRQL by following the project on Twitter, joining us on Discord, starring the repo.
Contribute to the project — we’re a really friendly community, whether you’re a recent SQL user or an advanced Rust programmer. We need bug reports, documentation tweaks & feature requests — just as much as we need compiler improvements written in Rust.
I especially want to give Aljaž Mur Eržen (@aljazerzen) the credit he deserves, who has contributed the majority of the difficult work of building out the compiler. Much credit also goes to @charlie-sanders, one of PRQL’s earliest supporters and the author of pyprql, and Ryan Patterson-Cross (@rbpatt2019), who built the Jupyter integration among other Python contributions.
Other contributors who deserve a special mention include: @roG0d, @snth, @kwigley
Thank you, and we look forward to your feedback!