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问题:
I\'m finding a way to aggregate strings from different rows into a single row. I\'m looking to do this in many different places, so having a function to facilitate this would be nice. I\'ve tried solutions using COALESCE
and FOR XML
, but they just don\'t cut it for me.
String aggregation would do something like this:
id | Name Result: id | Names
-- - ---- -- - -----
1 | Matt 1 | Matt, Rocks
1 | Rocks 2 | Stylus
2 | Stylus
I\'ve taken a look at CLR-defined aggregate functions as a replacement for COALESCE
and FOR XML
, but apparently SQL Azure does not support CLR-defined stuff, which is a pain for me because I know being able to use it would solve a whole lot of problems for me.
Is there any possible workaround, or similarly optimal method (which might not be as optimal as CLR, but hey I\'ll take what I can get) that I can use to aggregate my stuff?
回答1:
SOLUTION
The definition of optimal can vary, but here\'s how to concatenate strings from different rows using regular Transact SQL, which should work fine in Azure.
;WITH Partitioned AS
(
SELECT
ID,
Name,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY ID ORDER BY Name) AS NameNumber,
COUNT(*) OVER (PARTITION BY ID) AS NameCount
FROM dbo.SourceTable
),
Concatenated AS
(
SELECT
ID,
CAST(Name AS nvarchar) AS FullName,
Name,
NameNumber,
NameCount
FROM Partitioned
WHERE NameNumber = 1
UNION ALL
SELECT
P.ID,
CAST(C.FullName + \', \' + P.Name AS nvarchar),
P.Name,
P.NameNumber,
P.NameCount
FROM Partitioned AS P
INNER JOIN Concatenated AS C
ON P.ID = C.ID
AND P.NameNumber = C.NameNumber + 1
)
SELECT
ID,
FullName
FROM Concatenated
WHERE NameNumber = NameCount
EXPLANATION
The approach boils down to three steps:
Number the rows using OVER
and PARTITION
grouping and ordering them as needed for the concatenation. The result is Partitioned
CTE. We keep counts of rows in each partition to filter the results later.
Using recursive CTE (Concatenated
) iterate through the row numbers (NameNumber
column) adding Name
values to FullName
column.
Filter out all results but the ones with the highest NameNumber
.
Please keep in mind that in order to make this query predictable one has to define both grouping (for example, in your scenario rows with the same ID
are concatenated) and sorting (I assumed that you simply sort the string alphabetically before concatenation).
I\'ve quickly tested the solution on SQL Server 2012 with the following data:
INSERT dbo.SourceTable (ID, Name)
VALUES
(1, \'Matt\'),
(1, \'Rocks\'),
(2, \'Stylus\'),
(3, \'Foo\'),
(3, \'Bar\'),
(3, \'Baz\')
The query result:
ID FullName
----------- ------------------------------
2 Stylus
3 Bar, Baz, Foo
1 Matt, Rocks
回答2:
Are methods using FOR XML PATH like below really that slow? Itzik Ben-Gan writes that this method has good performance in his T-SQL Querying book (Mr. Ben-Gan is a trustworthy source, in my view).
create table #t (id int, name varchar(20))
insert into #t
values (1, \'Matt\'), (1, \'Rocks\'), (2, \'Stylus\')
select id
,Names = stuff((select \', \' + name as [text()]
from #t xt
where xt.id = t.id
for xml path(\'\')), 1, 2, \'\')
from #t t
group by id
回答3:
For those of us who found this and are not using Azure SQL Database:
STRING_AGG()
in PostgreSQL, SQL Server 2017 and Azure SQL
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/functions-aggregate.html
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/functions/string-agg-transact-sql
GROUP_CONCAT()
in MySQL
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/group-by-functions.html#function_group-concat
(Thanks to @Brianjorden and @milanio for Azure update)
Example Code:
select Id
, STRING_AGG(Name, \', \') Names
from Demo
group by Id
SQL Fiddle: http://sqlfiddle.com/#!18/89251/1
回答4:
Although @serge answer is correct but i compared time consumption of his way against xmlpath and i found the xmlpath is so faster. I\'ll write the compare code and you can check it by yourself.
This is @serge way:
DECLARE @startTime datetime2;
DECLARE @endTime datetime2;
DECLARE @counter INT;
SET @counter = 1;
set nocount on;
declare @YourTable table (ID int, Name nvarchar(50))
WHILE @counter < 1000
BEGIN
insert into @YourTable VALUES (ROUND(@counter/10,0), CONVERT(NVARCHAR(50), @counter) + \'CC\')
SET @counter = @counter + 1;
END
SET @startTime = GETDATE()
;WITH Partitioned AS
(
SELECT
ID,
Name,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY ID ORDER BY Name) AS NameNumber,
COUNT(*) OVER (PARTITION BY ID) AS NameCount
FROM @YourTable
),
Concatenated AS
(
SELECT ID, CAST(Name AS nvarchar) AS FullName, Name, NameNumber, NameCount FROM Partitioned WHERE NameNumber = 1
UNION ALL
SELECT
P.ID, CAST(C.FullName + \', \' + P.Name AS nvarchar), P.Name, P.NameNumber, P.NameCount
FROM Partitioned AS P
INNER JOIN Concatenated AS C ON P.ID = C.ID AND P.NameNumber = C.NameNumber + 1
)
SELECT
ID,
FullName
FROM Concatenated
WHERE NameNumber = NameCount
SET @endTime = GETDATE();
SELECT DATEDIFF(millisecond,@startTime, @endTime)
--Take about 54 milliseconds
And this is xmlpath way:
DECLARE @startTime datetime2;
DECLARE @endTime datetime2;
DECLARE @counter INT;
SET @counter = 1;
set nocount on;
declare @YourTable table (RowID int, HeaderValue int, ChildValue varchar(5))
WHILE @counter < 1000
BEGIN
insert into @YourTable VALUES (@counter, ROUND(@counter/10,0), CONVERT(NVARCHAR(50), @counter) + \'CC\')
SET @counter = @counter + 1;
END
SET @startTime = GETDATE();
set nocount off
SELECT
t1.HeaderValue
,STUFF(
(SELECT
\', \' + t2.ChildValue
FROM @YourTable t2
WHERE t1.HeaderValue=t2.HeaderValue
ORDER BY t2.ChildValue
FOR XML PATH(\'\'), TYPE
).value(\'.\',\'varchar(max)\')
,1,2, \'\'
) AS ChildValues
FROM @YourTable t1
GROUP BY t1.HeaderValue
SET @endTime = GETDATE();
SELECT DATEDIFF(millisecond,@startTime, @endTime)
--Take about 4 milliseconds
回答5:
Update: Ms SQL Server 2017+, Azure SQL Database
You can use: STRING_AGG
.
Usage is pretty simple for OP\'s request:
SELECT id, STRING_AGG(name, \', \') AS names
FROM some_table
GROUP BY id
Read More
Well my old non-answer got rightfully deleted (left in-tact below), but if anyone happens to land here in the future, there is good news. They have implimented STRING_AGG() in Azure SQL Database as well. That should provide the exact functionality originally requested in this post with native and built in support. @hrobky mentioned this previously as a SQL Server 2016 feature at the time.
--- Old Post:
Not enough reputation here to reply to @hrobky directly, but STRING_AGG looks great, however it is only available in SQL Server 2016 vNext currently. Hopefully it will follow to Azure SQL Datababse soon as well..
回答6:
I found Serge\'s answer to be very promising, but I also encountered performance issues with it as-written. However, when I restructured it to use temporary tables and not include double CTE tables, the performance went from 1 minute 40 seconds to sub-second for 1000 combined records. Here it is for anyone who needs to do this without FOR XML on older versions of SQL Server:
DECLARE @STRUCTURED_VALUES TABLE (
ID INT
,VALUE VARCHAR(MAX) NULL
,VALUENUMBER BIGINT
,VALUECOUNT INT
);
INSERT INTO @STRUCTURED_VALUES
SELECT ID
,VALUE
,ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY ID ORDER BY VALUE) AS VALUENUMBER
,COUNT(*) OVER (PARTITION BY ID) AS VALUECOUNT
FROM RAW_VALUES_TABLE;
WITH CTE AS (
SELECT SV.ID
,SV.VALUE
,SV.VALUENUMBER
,SV.VALUECOUNT
FROM @STRUCTURED_VALUES SV
WHERE VALUENUMBER = 1
UNION ALL
SELECT SV.ID
,CTE.VALUE + \' \' + SV.VALUE AS VALUE
,SV.VALUENUMBER
,SV.VALUECOUNT
FROM @STRUCTURED_VALUES SV
JOIN CTE
ON SV.ID = CTE.ID
AND SV.VALUENUMBER = CTE.VALUENUMBER + 1
)
SELECT ID
,VALUE
FROM CTE
WHERE VALUENUMBER = VALUECOUNT
ORDER BY ID
;
回答7:
You can use += to concatenate strings, for example:
declare @test nvarchar(max)
set @test = \'\'
select @test += name from names
if you select @test, it will give you all names concatenated