You can use the IN keyword to complete a nested search

Beginning with version 5.2 of ThoughtSpot, you no longer need a View when you want to do a search on top of another search, commonly known as a subquery. You can use the IN keyword instead.

Suppose you must narrow a result set based on criteria defined using a search. For example:

Find the top 5 stores by sales in the bakery department

Then you want to see all sales across all departments for those five stores.

In past versions, you’d have two options:

  1. Do your first search to find top 5 stores by bakery sales and save it as a View. Then join the view to your worksheet and search both together to get your answer.

    This approach gives a dynamic result that’s computed on the fly each time, but it require the Can Manage Data privilege and requires multiple steps.

  2. Save the names of the five stores with the most bakery sales and use them as a filter in a new search.

    This approach is easy to accomplish for ad hoc searches, but doesn’t compute dynamically.

Now you can do this analysis in a single search using the “in” keyword. This provides the benefit of computing the answer dynamically without the extra steps required when using a view.

The “in” keyword

Keyword Example
in (subsearch) in (top 10 store name by sales footwear)
  1. Start a new search.

  2. Run the search you plan to use for the `in clause. That is, the first level search.

    Check that the result is what you’re looking for.

  3. Copy that search, and paste it into your new search as the in clause.