Lists functions defined in machine learning models.
For more information, see Snowflake Model Registry.
SHOW FUNCTIONS [ LIKE '<pattern>' ] IN MODEL <model_name> [ VERSION <version_name> ]
Copy
Parameters¶LIKE 'pattern'
Optionally filters the command output by object name. The filter uses case-insensitive pattern matching, with support for SQL wildcard characters (%
and _
).
For example, the following patterns return the same results:
... LIKE '%testing%' ...
... LIKE '%TESTING%' ...
. Default: No value (no filtering is applied to the output).
MODEL model_name
, . MODEL model_name VERSION version_name
Returns records for the specified version (version_name
) of the specified machine learning model (model_name
).
If a version is not specified, records are displayed for the model’s default version.
The SHOW FUNCTIONS IN MODEL command output provides function properties and metadata in the following columns:
Column
Description
created_on
The timestamp at which the function was created.
name
The function’s name.
version_name
The name of the model version that the function belongs to.
min_num_arguments
The minimum number of arguments to the function.
max_num_arguments
The maximum number of arguments to the function.
arguments
The data types of the arguments as a JSON-formatted string.
return_type
The data type of the return value.
description
Description of the function.
language
The language in which the function was written, such as “PYTHON”.
Usage notes¶The command doesn’t require a running warehouse to execute.
The command only returns objects for which the current user’s current role has been granted at least one access privilege.
The MANAGE GRANTS access privilege implicitly allows its holder to see every object in the account. By default, only the account administrator (users with the ACCOUNTADMIN role) and security administrator (users with the SECURITYADMIN role) have the MANAGE GRANTS privilege.
To post-process the output of this command, you can use the pipe operator (->>
) or the RESULT_SCAN function. Both constructs treat the output as a result set that you can query.
The output column names for this command are generated in lowercase. If you consume a result set from this command with the pipe operator or the RESULT_SCAN function, use double-quoted identifiers for the column names in the query to ensure that they match the column names in the output that was scanned. For example, if the name of an output column is type
, then specify "type"
for the identifier.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4