2

I'm doing Recency-Frequency-Monetary analysis and while I have a model working in Python I'm trying to implement it in SQL due to production code being mainly PHP (Oracle 12c fwiw or could also be done in postgres). I saw an example online which added new columns using ntile however I want to use the equivalent of quantile (e.g. splitting up recency bin edges to 0,0,74,321 for 5 quantiles). I have started going the route below, but is there a tidier way?

SELECT
   percentile_disc(0.2) within group (order by recency) as recency_1_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.4) within group (order by recency) as recency_2_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.6) within group (order by recency) as recency_3_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.8) within group (order by recency) as recency_4_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.2) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_1_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.4) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_2_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.6) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_3_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.8) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_4_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.2) within group (order by frequency) as frequency_1_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.4) within group (order by frequency) as frequency_2_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.6) within group (order by frequency) as monetary_3_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.8) within group (order by frequency) as monetary_4_quin
FROM RFM;

Edit: With help, this is where I'm at, but stuck on a group by within a CTE. [42000][978] ORA-00978: nested group function without GROUP BY

RFM AS (
SELECT SRC_USER_ID,
  COUNT(distinct PICKUP_DATE) -1 as frequency,
  (MAX(PICKUP_DATE) - MIN(PICKUP_DATE)) as recency,
  (TO_DATE ('2018/05/12', 'yyyy/mm/dd') - MIN(PICKUP_DATE)) as T,
  SUM(PRICE_TOTAL) AS monetary_value
FROM TRANSACTIONS
group by SRC_USER_ID
ORDER BY frequency DESC),
  MAX_VALUES AS (
      select sum(max(recency) + 0.0000000001) as max_recency,
              sum(max(frequency) + 0.00000001) as max_frequency,
             sum(max(monetary_value) + 0.000000001) as max_monetary
      FROM RFM
  )
SELECT
    SRC_USER_ID,
    recency,
    frequency,
    monetary_value,
  WIDTH_BUCKET(recency, 0, max_recency, 5) "recency_quantile",
  WIDTH_BUCKET(frequency, 0, max_frequency, 5) "frequency_quantile",
  WIDTH_BUCKET(monetary_value, 0, max_monetary, 5) "monetary_quantile"
FROM RFM, MAX_VALUES
5
  • Does this help?
    – user330315
    May 18, 2018 at 7:24
  • Thanks for that and for the formatting! I don't immediately see how that solves it. There seems to be some (understandable) confusion between quantile and ntile... quantile is a statistical concept of breaking up a distribution, while ntile as implmented in sql and just divides it into an even number of rows.
    – eamon1234
    May 18, 2018 at 7:28
  • So are you maybe looking for width_bucket() then?
    – user330315
    May 18, 2018 at 7:32
  • Yes that looks to do part of the trick, thanks! That would be the second part of the query (width_bucket(frequency_1_quin, frequency_2_quin) etc. Is there a nicer way to get teh freq_1,2?
    – eamon1234
    May 18, 2018 at 7:35
  • I guess what I need in the function is min(recency) and max(recency), however if I include that I have to use a groupby recency and it doesn't work. SELECT recency, WIDTH_BUCKET(recency, min(recency), max(recency), 5) "recency_quantile" FROM RFM GROUP BY RFM.SRC_USER_ID, recency; All values get assigned to 6 (the overflow bucket)
    – eamon1234
    May 18, 2018 at 7:51

1 Answer 1

0

width_bucket() didn't give what I was looking for, so I ended up with the below.

RFM AS (
SELECT SRC_USER_ID,
  COUNT(distinct PICKUP_DATE) -1 as frequency,
  (MAX(PICKUP_DATE) - MIN(PICKUP_DATE)) as recency,
  (TO_DATE ('2018/05/12', 'yyyy/mm/dd') - MIN(PICKUP_DATE)) as T,
  SUM(PRICE_TOTAL) AS monetary_value
FROM TRANSACTIONS
group by SRC_USER_ID
ORDER BY frequency DESC),
QUINTILES AS (SELECT
   percentile_disc(0.2) within group (order by recency) as recency_1_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.4) within group (order by recency) as recency_2_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.6) within group (order by recency) as recency_3_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.8) within group (order by recency) as recency_4_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.2) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_value_1_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.4) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_value_2_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.6) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_value_3_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.8) within group (order by monetary_value) as monetary_value_4_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.2) within group (order by frequency) as frequency_1_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.4) within group (order by frequency) as frequency_2_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.6) within group (order by frequency) as frequency_3_quin,
   percentile_disc(0.8) within group (order by frequency) as frequency_4_quin
FROM RFM)
SELECT
    SRC_USER_ID,
    recency,
    frequency,
    monetary_value,
  (CASE WHEN recency <= recency_1_quin THEN 1
   WHEN recency > recency_1_quin and recency <= recency_2_quin THEN 2
   WHEN recency > recency_2_quin and recency <= recency_3_quin THEN 3
   WHEN recency > recency_3_quin and recency <= recency_4_quin THEN 4
   ELSE 5 END) "recency_quantile",
       (CASE WHEN frequency <= frequency_1_quin THEN 1
   WHEN frequency > frequency_1_quin and frequency <= frequency_2_quin THEN 2
   WHEN frequency > frequency_2_quin and frequency <= frequency_3_quin THEN 3
   WHEN frequency > frequency_3_quin and frequency <= frequency_4_quin THEN 4
   ELSE 5 END) "frequency_quantile",
     (CASE WHEN monetary_value <= monetary_value_1_quin THEN 1
   WHEN monetary_value > monetary_value_1_quin and monetary_value <= monetary_value_2_quin THEN 2
   WHEN monetary_value > monetary_value_2_quin and monetary_value <= monetary_value_3_quin THEN 3
   WHEN monetary_value > monetary_value_3_quin and monetary_value <= monetary_value_4_quin THEN 4
   ELSE 5 END) "monetary_value_quantile"

FROM RFM, QUINTILES
ORDER BY recency DESC, frequency DESC, monetary_value DESC;

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.