That is a range vector, and I still don't know what you're trying to do.

An instant vector, like
    request_Count{key="clientId"} offset 1d
should work just fine.

On Friday, 13 August 2021 at 18:58:10 UTC+1 Govind Madhu wrote:

> Additionally I tried to fetch the metric with an offset of 1d like below.
>
> request_Count{key="clientId"}[24h] offset 1d
>
>
> It was not coming in console. Current UTC time is 17:53. I tried with an 
> offset of 6h, it was still not coming. 
>
> When I tried with an offset of 5h53m,  I can see some value coming for the 
> above expression. I was under the impression that with offset you could get 
> the metric from previous days, but I am unable to get it.
>
> On Friday, August 13, 2021 at 11:07:22 PM UTC+5:30 Brian Candler wrote:
>
>> > And additionally, when I evaluate the expression 
>> request_Count{key="clientId"}[24h], I can see the value coming as 2
>>
>> That expression gives a range vector as its result: a table of (time X 
>> value).  It doesn't really make sense in the context of a graph, nor an 
>> alerting query.  However the PromQL will let you see it in console mode - 
>> it returns a table of values across the given interval.
>>
>

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