Robert Cain continues a series on KQL:
In an earlier post in this series, Fun With KQL – Count, you saw how to use the
count
operator to count the number of rows in a dataset.Then we learned about another operator,
distinct
, in the post Fun With KQL – Distinct. This showed how to get a list of distinct values from a table.While we could combine these, it would be logical to have a single command that returns a distinct count in one operation. As you may have guessed by the title of this post, such an operator exists:
dcount
.
Read on to see how you can use dcount
in queries, including how you can perform speed versus accuracy trade-offs.