The timespan data type

Applies to: ✅ Azure Data ExplorerAzure MonitorMicrosoft Sentinel

The timespan data type represents a time interval.

The timespan and time data types are equivalent.

timespan literals

To specify a timespan literal, use one of the following syntax options:

Syntax Description Example Length of time
nd A time interval represented by one or more digits followed by d for days. 2d 2 days
nh A time interval represented by one or more digits followed by h for hours. 1.5h 1.5 hours
nm A time interval represented by one or more digits followed by m for minutes. 30m 30 minutes
ns A time interval represented by one or more digits followed by s for seconds. 10s 10 seconds
nms A time interval represented by one or more digits followed by ms for milliseconds. 100ms 100 milliseconds
nmicrosecond A time interval represented by one or more digits followed by microsecond. 10microsecond 10 microseconds
ntick A time interval represented by one or more digits followed by tick to indicate nanoseconds. 1tick 100 ns
timespan(n seconds) A time interval in seconds. timespan(15 seconds) 15 seconds
timespan(n) A time interval in days. timespan(2) 2 days
timespan(days.hours:minutes:seconds.milliseconds) A time interval in days, hours, minutes, and seconds passed. timespan(0.12:34:56.7) 0d+12h+34m+56.7s
timespan(null) Represents the null value.

Learn more about syntax conventions.

timespan operators

Two values of type timespan may be added, subtracted, and divided. The last operation returns a value of type real representing the fractional number of times one value can fit the other.

Examples

The following example calculates how many seconds are in a day in several ways:

print
    result1 = 1d / 1s,
    result2 = time(1d) / time(1s),
    result3 = 24 * 60 * time(00:01:00) / time(1s)

This example converts the number of seconds in a day (represented by an integer value) to a timespan unit:

print 
    seconds = 86400
| extend t = seconds * 1s