len
function in APL (Axiom Processing Language) to determine the length of a string or the number of elements in an array. This function is useful when you want to filter, sort, or analyze data based on the size of a value—whether that’s the number of characters in a request URL or the number of cities associated with a user.
Use len
when you need to:
- Measure string lengths (for example, long request URIs).
- Count elements in dynamic arrays (such as tags or multi-value fields).
- Create conditional expressions based on the length of values.
For users of other query languages
If you come from other query languages, this section explains how to adjust your existing queries to achieve the same results in APL.Splunk SPL users
Splunk SPL users
In Splunk SPL, you often use the
len
function within eval
or where
expressions to determine string length or array size. In APL, len
works similarly, but is used as a standalone scalar function.ANSI SQL users
ANSI SQL users
In ANSI SQL, you use
LENGTH()
for strings and CARDINALITY()
for arrays. In APL, len
handles both cases—string and array—depending on the input type.Usage
Syntax
Parameters
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
value | string or array | The input to measure—either a string or an array. |
Returns
- If
value
is a string, returns the number of characters. - If
value
is an array, returns the number of elements. - Returns
null
if the input isnull
.
Use case examples
Use Run in PlaygroundOutput
The query filters logs for URIs longer than 100 characters and displays their lengths.
len
to find requests with long URIs, which might indicate poorly designed endpoints or potential abuse.Query_time | id | uri | uri_length |
---|---|---|---|
2025-06-18T12:34:00Z | user123 | /api/products/search?query=… | 132 |
2025-06-18T12:35:00Z | user456 | /download/file/very/long/path/… | 141 |
List of related functions
- array_length: Returns the number of elements in an array. Use this when working specifically with arrays.
- array_slice: Returns a subarray like
array_extract
, but supports negative indexing. - array_concat: Joins arrays end-to-end. Use before or after slicing arrays with
array_extract
.