Display few specific rows always at the top - sql-server

I want to display a few specific Rows always at top of the query results.
For example: Cities Table. Columns: City ID, City Name
I want to fetch Query result where Mumbai, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad should display at the top always.
1st way:
I can insert these records first in the table so that they will get displayed always at the top.
But, this way will not work if any other city gets added after a few months that I also want to display at the top.

Use an iif in your order by clause:
SELECT CityId, CityName
FROM Cities
ORDER BY IIF(CityName IN ('Mumbai', 'Bangalore', 'Chennai', 'Hyderabad'), 0, 1), CityName
You can't rely on the order in which you've entered the records to the table, because database tables are unsorted by nature, and without an order by clause, the order of the result set will be arbitrary.
For more information, read The “Natural order” misconception on my blog.

Try this:
Declare #t table (cityID int,cityname nvarchar(50))
insert into #t values (2,'Gujrat')
insert into #t values (4,'Surat')
insert into #t values (6,'Mumbai')
insert into #t values (3,'Bangalore')
insert into #t values (5,'Chennai')
insert into #t values (1,'Hyderabad')
select * from #t
order by case when cityname in ('Mumbai','Bangalore','Chennai','Hyderabad') then 0 else 1 END

Clean way of doing this,
Declare #t table (cityID int,cityname nvarchar(50))
Declare #DesireOrder table (id int identity,CityID int) -- instead of cityname
insert into #DesireOrder values (6),(3),(5),(1)
insert into #t values (2,'Gujrat')
insert into #t values (4,'Surat')
insert into #t values (6,'Mumbai')
insert into #t values (3,'Bangalore')
insert into #t values (5,'Chennai')
insert into #t values (1,'Hyderabad')
insert into #t values (8,'Delhi')
insert into #t values (7,'New Delhi')
select t.* from #t t
left join DesireOrder O on t.cityid=O.cityid
order by o.id,t.cityID
Main idea is #DesireOrder, rest you can implement as per your requirement.

Related

Calculating statistics of interactions between football players

I have a table of kicks between a number of football players. Most interactions have both a kicker and receiver, but sometimes the pass is made but never received. The table contains 3 columns. For purposes of the example, I have added a "PassID" column to assist with the description of the problem.
The table looks as follows:
create table #T (Player1 varchar(25),Action varchar(25),Player2 varchar(25),PassID int)
insert into #T select 'Jamie','Kicked to','Pierre',1
insert into #T select 'Pierre','Received from ','Jamie',1
insert into #T select 'Jamie','Kicked to ','Mohamed',2
insert into #T select 'Jamie','Received from ','Kun',3
insert into #T select 'Kun ','Kicked to','Jamie',3
insert into #T select 'Mohamed','Received from ','Pierre',4
insert into #T select 'Pierre','Kicked to','Mohamed',4
insert into #T select 'Mohamed','Kicked to','Kun',5
insert into #T select 'Jamie ','Kicked to ','Kun',6
insert into #T select 'Kun ','Received from ','Jamie',6
insert into #T select 'Jamie','Received from ','Kun',7
insert into #T select 'Kun ','Kicked to','Jamie',7
I have to answer the following question using SQL server:
How many unique interactions exist, where a unique interaction is defined as a kick between two players, whether completed or not and where the direction of the interaction does not matter?
In this simple example, I know the answer is 5,being:
Jamie/Pierre
Jamie/Mohamed
Jamie/Kun
Mohamed/Pierre
Mohamed/Kun
How do I extract this answer from the table using T-SQL statement?
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT CASE
WHEN Player1 > Player2 THEN CONCAT(Player1,'+',Player2)
ELSE CONCAT(Player2,'+',Player1)
END )
FROM #T
WHERE Action = 'Kicked To';
Here is a SQL Fiddle
Try with the below code.
Select CONCAT(x.Player1,'/',x.Player2)Title from (
Select *,ROW_NUMBER() over (PARTITION by passid order by passid)Row from #T
)X
where Row=1

sqlserver assigning last inserted Id to another column in one query

when this query is executed
DECLARE #Temp TABLE (ID INT IDENTITY,Name VARCHAR(50),ID2 INT NULL)
INSERT INTO #Temp ([Name]) VALUES ('Ali')
UPDATE #Temp SET ID2= (SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY()) WHERE [ID]=(SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY())
INSERT INTO #Temp ([Name]) VALUES ('Veli')
UPDATE #Temp SET ID2= (SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY()) WHERE [ID]=(SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY())
SELECT * FROM #Temp
We can get this table
ID-NAME-ID2
1 - Ali - 1
2 - Veli - 2
is there a way to do this in one insert query ( Assigning inserted id to another column without using idendity property in that column) ?
thanks a lot.
You want to make it a computed column like below
create TABLE Temp(ID INT IDENTITY,Name
VARCHAR(50),
ID2 AS ID PERSISTED);
Then insert rows ... your ID values will be persisted in ID2 column
INSERT INTO Temp ([Name])
VALUES ('Ali');
INSERT INTO Temp ([Name])
VALUES ('Veli');
INSERT INTO Temp ([Name])
VALUES ('Neli');
Which will results in
See a demo fiddle here http://sqlfiddle.com/#!3/59fca/1
EDIT:
If you can't change your table structure then the only way insert ID value to ID2 column is the way you are currently doing it cause in same insert statement the identity value is still not available and so it will be null.

how to remove duplicate rows from a table in SQL Server [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How can I remove duplicate rows?
(43 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
I have a table called table1 which has duplicate values. It looks like this:
new
pen
book
pen
like
book
book
pen
but I want to remove the duplicated rows from that table and insert them into another table called table2.
table2 should look like this:
new
pen
book
like
How can I do this in SQL Server?
Let's assume the field was named name:
INSERT INTO table2 (name)
SELECT name FROM table1 GROUP BY name
that query would get you all the unique names.
You could even put them into a table variable if you wanted:
DECLARE #Table2 TABLE (name VARCHAR(50))
INSERT INTO #Table2 (name)
SELECT name FROM table1 GROUP BY name
or you could use a temp table:
CREATE TABLE #Table2 (name VARCHAR(50))
INSERT INTO #Table2 (name)
SELECT name FROM table1 GROUP BY name
You can do this easily with a INSERT that SELECTs from a CTE where you use ROW_NUMBER(), like:
DECLARE #YourTable table (YourColumn varchar(10))
DECLARE #YourTable2 table (YourColumn varchar(10))
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('new')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('pen')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('book')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('pen')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('like')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('book')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('book')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('pen')
;WITH OrderedResults AS
(
SELECT
YourColumn, ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY YourColumn ORDER BY YourColumn) AS RowNumber
FROM #YourTable
)
INSERT INTO #YourTable2
(YourColumn)
SELECT YourColumn FROM OrderedResults
WHERE RowNumber=1
SELECT * FROM #YourTable2
OUTPUT:
YourColumn
----------
book
like
new
pen
(4 row(s) affected)
You can do this easily with a DELETE on a CTE where you use ROW_NUMBER(), like:
--this will just remove them from your original table
DECLARE #YourTable table (YourColumn varchar(10))
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('new')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('pen')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('book')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('pen')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('like')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('book')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('book')
INSERT INTO #YourTable VALUES ('pen')
;WITH OrderedResults AS
(
SELECT
YourColumn, ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY YourColumn ORDER BY YourColumn) AS RowNumber
FROM #YourTable
)
DELETE OrderedResults
WHERE RowNumber!=1
SELECT * FROM #YourTable
OUTPUT:
YourColumn
----------
new
pen
book
like
(4 row(s) affected)
I posted something on deleting duplicates a couple of weeks ago by using DELETE TOP X. Only for a single set of duplicates obviously. However in the comments I was given this little jewel by Joshua Patchak.
;WITH cte(rowNumber) AS
(SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY [List of Natural Key Fields]
ORDER BY [List of Order By Fields])
FROM dbo.TableName)
DELETE FROM cte WHERE rowNumber>1
This will get rid of all of the duplicates in the table.
Here is the original post if you want to read the discussion. Duplicate rows in a table.

Using merge..output to get mapping between source.id and target.id

Very simplified, I have two tables Source and Target.
declare #Source table (SourceID int identity(1,2), SourceName varchar(50))
declare #Target table (TargetID int identity(2,2), TargetName varchar(50))
insert into #Source values ('Row 1'), ('Row 2')
I would like to move all rows from #Source to #Target and know the TargetID for each SourceID because there are also the tables SourceChild and TargetChild that needs to be copied as well and I need to add the new TargetID into TargetChild.TargetID FK column.
There are a couple of solutions to this.
Use a while loop or cursors to insert one row (RBAR) to Target at a time and use scope_identity() to fill the FK of TargetChild.
Add a temp column to #Target and insert SourceID. You can then join that column to fetch the TargetID for the FK in TargetChild.
SET IDENTITY_INSERT OFF for #Target and handle assigning new values yourself. You get a range that you then use in TargetChild.TargetID.
I'm not all that fond of any of them. The one I used so far is cursors.
What I would really like to do is to use the output clause of the insert statement.
insert into #Target(TargetName)
output inserted.TargetID, S.SourceID
select SourceName
from #Source as S
But it is not possible
The multi-part identifier "S.SourceID" could not be bound.
But it is possible with a merge.
merge #Target as T
using #Source as S
on 0=1
when not matched then
insert (TargetName) values (SourceName)
output inserted.TargetID, S.SourceID;
Result
TargetID SourceID
----------- -----------
2 1
4 3
I want to know if you have used this? If you have any thoughts about the solution or see any problems with it? It works fine in simple scenarios but perhaps something ugly could happen when the query plan get really complicated due to a complicated source query. Worst scenario would be that the TargetID/SourceID pairs actually isn't a match.
MSDN has this to say about the from_table_name of the output clause.
Is a column prefix that specifies a table included in the FROM clause of a DELETE, UPDATE, or MERGE statement that is used to specify the rows to update or delete.
For some reason they don't say "rows to insert, update or delete" only "rows to update or delete".
Any thoughts are welcome and totally different solutions to the original problem is much appreciated.
In my opinion this is a great use of MERGE and output. I've used in several scenarios and haven't experienced any oddities to date.
For example, here is test setup that clones a Folder and all Files (identity) within it into a newly created Folder (guid).
DECLARE #FolderIndex TABLE (FolderId UNIQUEIDENTIFIER PRIMARY KEY, FolderName varchar(25));
INSERT INTO #FolderIndex
(FolderId, FolderName)
VALUES(newid(), 'OriginalFolder');
DECLARE #FileIndex TABLE (FileId int identity(1,1) PRIMARY KEY, FileName varchar(10));
INSERT INTO #FileIndex
(FileName)
VALUES('test.txt');
DECLARE #FileFolder TABLE (FolderId UNIQUEIDENTIFIER, FileId int, PRIMARY KEY(FolderId, FileId));
INSERT INTO #FileFolder
(FolderId, FileId)
SELECT FolderId,
FileId
FROM #FolderIndex
CROSS JOIN #FileIndex; -- just to illustrate
DECLARE #sFolder TABLE (FromFolderId UNIQUEIDENTIFIER, ToFolderId UNIQUEIDENTIFIER);
DECLARE #sFile TABLE (FromFileId int, ToFileId int);
-- copy Folder Structure
MERGE #FolderIndex fi
USING ( SELECT 1 [Dummy],
FolderId,
FolderName
FROM #FolderIndex [fi]
WHERE FolderName = 'OriginalFolder'
) d ON d.Dummy = 0
WHEN NOT MATCHED
THEN INSERT
(FolderId, FolderName)
VALUES (newid(), 'copy_'+FolderName)
OUTPUT d.FolderId,
INSERTED.FolderId
INTO #sFolder (FromFolderId, toFolderId);
-- copy File structure
MERGE #FileIndex fi
USING ( SELECT 1 [Dummy],
fi.FileId,
fi.[FileName]
FROM #FileIndex fi
INNER
JOIN #FileFolder fm ON
fi.FileId = fm.FileId
INNER
JOIN #FolderIndex fo ON
fm.FolderId = fo.FolderId
WHERE fo.FolderName = 'OriginalFolder'
) d ON d.Dummy = 0
WHEN NOT MATCHED
THEN INSERT ([FileName])
VALUES ([FileName])
OUTPUT d.FileId,
INSERTED.FileId
INTO #sFile (FromFileId, toFileId);
-- link new files to Folders
INSERT INTO #FileFolder (FileId, FolderId)
SELECT sfi.toFileId, sfo.toFolderId
FROM #FileFolder fm
INNER
JOIN #sFile sfi ON
fm.FileId = sfi.FromFileId
INNER
JOIN #sFolder sfo ON
fm.FolderId = sfo.FromFolderId
-- return
SELECT *
FROM #FileIndex fi
JOIN #FileFolder ff ON
fi.FileId = ff.FileId
JOIN #FolderIndex fo ON
ff.FolderId = fo.FolderId
I would like to add another example to add to #Nathan's example, as I found it somewhat confusing.
Mine uses real tables for the most part, and not temp tables.
I also got my inspiration from here: another example
-- Copy the FormSectionInstance
DECLARE #FormSectionInstanceTable TABLE(OldFormSectionInstanceId INT, NewFormSectionInstanceId INT)
;MERGE INTO [dbo].[FormSectionInstance]
USING
(
SELECT
fsi.FormSectionInstanceId [OldFormSectionInstanceId]
, #NewFormHeaderId [NewFormHeaderId]
, fsi.FormSectionId
, fsi.IsClone
, #UserId [NewCreatedByUserId]
, GETDATE() NewCreatedDate
, #UserId [NewUpdatedByUserId]
, GETDATE() NewUpdatedDate
FROM [dbo].[FormSectionInstance] fsi
WHERE fsi.[FormHeaderId] = #FormHeaderId
) tblSource ON 1=0 -- use always false condition
WHEN NOT MATCHED
THEN INSERT
( [FormHeaderId], FormSectionId, IsClone, CreatedByUserId, CreatedDate, UpdatedByUserId, UpdatedDate)
VALUES( [NewFormHeaderId], FormSectionId, IsClone, NewCreatedByUserId, NewCreatedDate, NewUpdatedByUserId, NewUpdatedDate)
OUTPUT tblSource.[OldFormSectionInstanceId], INSERTED.FormSectionInstanceId
INTO #FormSectionInstanceTable(OldFormSectionInstanceId, NewFormSectionInstanceId);
-- Copy the FormDetail
INSERT INTO [dbo].[FormDetail]
(FormHeaderId, FormFieldId, FormSectionInstanceId, IsOther, Value, CreatedByUserId, CreatedDate, UpdatedByUserId, UpdatedDate)
SELECT
#NewFormHeaderId, FormFieldId, fsit.NewFormSectionInstanceId, IsOther, Value, #UserId, CreatedDate, #UserId, UpdatedDate
FROM [dbo].[FormDetail] fd
INNER JOIN #FormSectionInstanceTable fsit ON fsit.OldFormSectionInstanceId = fd.FormSectionInstanceId
WHERE [FormHeaderId] = #FormHeaderId
Here's a solution that doesn't use MERGE (which I've had problems with many times I try to avoid if possible). It relies on two memory tables (you could use temp tables if you want) with IDENTITY columns that get matched, and importantly, using ORDER BY when doing the INSERT, and WHERE conditions that match between the two INSERTs... the first one holds the source IDs and the second one holds the target IDs.
-- Setup... We have a table that we need to know the old IDs and new IDs after copying.
-- We want to copy all of DocID=1
DECLARE #newDocID int = 99;
DECLARE #tbl table (RuleID int PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL IDENTITY(1, 1), DocID int, Val varchar(100));
INSERT INTO #tbl (DocID, Val) VALUES (1, 'RuleA-2'), (1, 'RuleA-1'), (2, 'RuleB-1'), (2, 'RuleB-2'), (3, 'RuleC-1'), (1, 'RuleA-3')
-- Create a break in IDENTITY values.. just to simulate more realistic data
INSERT INTO #tbl (Val) VALUES ('DeleteMe'), ('DeleteMe');
DELETE FROM #tbl WHERE Val = 'DeleteMe';
INSERT INTO #tbl (DocID, Val) VALUES (6, 'RuleE'), (7, 'RuleF');
SELECT * FROM #tbl t;
-- Declare TWO temp tables each with an IDENTITY - one will hold the RuleID of the items we are copying, other will hold the RuleID that we create
DECLARE #input table (RID int IDENTITY(1, 1), SourceRuleID int NOT NULL, Val varchar(100));
DECLARE #output table (RID int IDENTITY(1,1), TargetRuleID int NOT NULL, Val varchar(100));
-- Capture the IDs of the rows we will be copying by inserting them into the #input table
-- Important - we must specify the sort order - best thing is to use the IDENTITY of the source table (t.RuleID) that we are copying
INSERT INTO #input (SourceRuleID, Val) SELECT t.RuleID, t.Val FROM #tbl t WHERE t.DocID = 1 ORDER BY t.RuleID;
-- Copy the rows, and use the OUTPUT clause to capture the IDs of the inserted rows.
-- Important - we must use the same WHERE and ORDER BY clauses as above
INSERT INTO #tbl (DocID, Val)
OUTPUT Inserted.RuleID, Inserted.Val INTO #output(TargetRuleID, Val)
SELECT #newDocID, t.Val FROM #tbl t
WHERE t.DocID = 1
ORDER BY t.RuleID;
-- Now #input and #output should have the same # of rows, and the order of both inserts was the same, so the IDENTITY columns (RID) can be matched
-- Use this as the map from old-to-new when you are copying sub-table rows
-- Technically, #input and #output don't even need the 'Val' columns, just RID and RuleID - they were included here to prove that the rules matched
SELECT i.*, o.* FROM #output o
INNER JOIN #input i ON i.RID = o.RID
-- Confirm the matching worked
SELECT * FROM #tbl t

contains search over a table variable or a temp table

i'm trying to concatenate several columns from a persistent table into one column of a table variable, so that i can run a contains("foo" and "bar") and get a result even if foo is not in the same column as bar.
however, it isn't possible to create a unique index on a table variable, hence no fulltext index to run a contains.
is there a way to, dynamically, concatenate several columns and run a contains on them? here's an example:
declare #t0 table
(
id uniqueidentifier not null,
search_text varchar(max)
)
declare #t1 table ( id uniqueidentifier )
insert into
#t0 (id, search_text)
select
id,
foo + bar
from
description_table
insert into
#t1
select
id
from
#t0
where
contains( search_text, '"c++*" AND "programming*"' )
You cannot use CONTAINS on a table that has not been configured to use Full Text Indexing, and that cannot be applied to table variables.
If you want to use CONTAINS (as opposed to the less flexible PATINDEX) you will need to base the whole query on a table with a FT index.
You can't use full text indexing on a table variable but you can apply the full text parser. Would something like this do what you need?
declare #d table
(
id int identity(1,1),
testing varchar(1000)
)
INSERT INTO #D VALUES ('c++ programming')
INSERT INTO #D VALUES ('c# programming')
INSERT INTO #D VALUES ('c++ books')
SELECT id
FROM #D
CROSS APPLY sys.dm_fts_parser('"' + REPLACE(testing,'"','""') + '"', 1033, 0,0)
where display_term in ('c++','programming')
GROUP BY id
HAVING COUNT(DISTINCT display_term)=2
NB: There might well be a better way of using the parser but I couldn't quite figure it out. Details of it are at this link
declare #table table
(
id int,
fname varchar(50)
)
insert into #table select 1, 'Adam James Will'
insert into #table select 1, 'Jain William'
insert into #table select 1, 'Bob Rob James'
select * from #table where fname like '%ja%' and fname like '%wi%'
Is it something like this.

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