Reputation: 1821
I've integrated my Firebase project with BigQuery. Now I'm facing a data discrepancy issue while trying to get 1 day active users, for the selected date i.e. 20190210, with following query from BigQuery;
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT user_pseudo_id) AS 1_day_active_users_count
FROM `MY_TABLE.events_*`
WHERE event_name = 'user_engagement' AND _TABLE_SUFFIX = '20190210'
But the figures returned from BigQuery doesn't match with the ones reported on Firebase Analytics Dashboard for the same date. Any clue what's possibly going wrong here?
The following sample query mentioned my Firebase Team, here https://support.google.com/firebase/answer/9037342?hl=en&ref_topic=7029512, is not so helpful as its taking into consideration the current time and getting users accordingly.
N-day active users
/**
* Builds an audience of N-Day Active Users.
*
* N-day active users = users who have logged at least one user_engagement
* event in the last N days.
*/
SELECT
COUNT(DISTINCT user_id) AS n_day_active_users_count
FROM
-- PLEASE REPLACE WITH YOUR TABLE NAME.
`YOUR_TABLE.events_*`
WHERE
event_name = 'user_engagement'
-- Pick events in the last N = 20 days.
AND event_timestamp >
UNIX_MICROS(TIMESTAMP_SUB(CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, INTERVAL 20 DAY))
-- PLEASE REPLACE WITH YOUR DESIRED DATE RANGE.
AND _TABLE_SUFFIX BETWEEN '20180521' AND '20240131';
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1526
Reputation: 17523
So given the small discrepancy here, I believe the issue is one of timezones.
When you're looking at a "day" in the Firebase Console, you're looking at the time interval from midnight to midnight in whatever time zone you've specified when you first set up your project. When you're looking at a "day" in BigQuery, you're looking at the time interval from midnight to midnight in UTC.
If you want to make sure you're looking at the events that match up with what's in your console, you should query the event_timestamp value in your BigQuery table (and remember that it might span multiple tables) to match up with what's in your timezone.
Upvotes: 1