This page explains how to use the isstring function in APL.
Use the isstring
function to determine whether a value is of type string. This function is especially helpful when working with heterogeneous datasets where field types are not guaranteed, or when ingesting data from sources with loosely structured or mixed schemas.
You can use isstring
to:
- Filter rows based on whether a field is a string.
- Validate and clean data before applying string functions.
- Avoid runtime errors in queries that expect specific data types.
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, type checking is typically implicit and not exposed through a dedicated function like isstring
. Instead, you often rely on function compatibility and casting behavior. In APL, isstring
provides an explicit and reliable way to check if a value is a string before further processing.
ANSI SQL users
ANSI SQL users
ANSI SQL does not include a built-in IS STRING
function. Instead, type checks usually rely on schema constraints, manual casting, or vendor-specific solutions. In contrast, APL offers isstring
as a first-class function that returns a boolean indicating whether a value is of type string.
Usage
Syntax
Parameters
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
value | any | The value to test for string type. |
Returns
A bool
value that is true
if the input value is of type string, false
otherwise.
Use case example
Use isstring
to filter rows where the HTTP status code is a valid string.
Query
Output
_time | status | is_string |
---|---|---|
2025-06-05T12:10:00Z | ”404” | true |
This query filters out logs where the status
field is stored as a string, which can help filter out ingestion issues or schema inconsistencies.