Notification

This Help Center is moving to Cloud. Learn more about the migration.

QUARTER

Returns the quarter of the year for a given date.

Sample usage

QUARTER(Date)

Syntax

1) Returns the quarter from a Date value.

QUARTER(date_expression)

2) Returns the quarter from a compatibility mode Date value.

QUARTER(X [,format_string])

Parameters

  • date_expression - a Date & Time field or expression.
  • X - a field or expression that evaluates to Text, Number, or compatibility mode Date.
  • format_string - format for X. Optional if X is correctly configured as a semantic date field.

Input format for compatibility mode dates

Supported date functions accept the following input formats if X is a Text field or expression, or compatibility mode Date:

  • Any valid strptime format is accepted.
  • 'BASIC': %Y/%m/%d-%H:%M:%S
  • 'DEFAULT_DASH': %Y-%m-%d [%H:%M:%S]
  • 'DEFAULT_SLASH': %Y/%m/%d [%H:%M:%S]
  • 'DEFAULT_DECIMAL': %Y%m%d [%H:%M:%S
  • 'RFC_1123': for example, Sat, 24 May 2008 20:09:47 GMT
  • 'RFC_3339': for example, 2008-05-24T20:09:47Z
  • 'DECIMAL_DATE': same as 'DEFAULT_DECIMAL'

Supported time functions accept the following input format if X is a Number field or expression:

  • 'SECONDS': seconds since Epoch
  • 'MILLIS': milliseconds since Epoch
  • 'MICROS': microseconds since Epoch
  • 'NANOS': nanoseconds since Epoch
  • 'JULIAN_DATE': days since Epoch

Examples

Example formula Input Output
QUARTER(Date) Jan 1, 2019 1
QUARTER(Date as Text, 'BASIC') 2019/01/01-09:40:45 1
QUARTER(Date as Number, 'SECONDS') 1561784874 2

QUARTER(Date as lots of Numbers, 'MILLIS')

1562004058620 3

Notes

This function works with both compatibility mode dates and upgraded Date and Date & Time data types.

Was this helpful?

How can we improve it?
true
What's new in Looker Studio?

Learn about new features and recent changes. Looker Studio release notes live on Google Cloud.

Search
Clear search
Close search
Google apps
Main menu
6728943624655608504
true
Search Help Center
true
true
true
true
true
102097
false
false