Hi I need to populate table by selecting value from child node
XML looks like this
<Transmitters>
<Id>1</Id><CoverageLevel>2</CoverageLevel>
<Id>2</Id><CoverageLevel>4</CoverageLevel>
<Id>3</Id><CoverageLevel>6</CoverageLevel>
</Transmitters>
and table has two fields
Transmitter(Id, CoverageLevel)
INSERT INTO
Transmitter([idTransmitter], [coverageLevel])
SELECT
ParamValues.T.value('Id[1]', 'nvarchar(50)'),
ParamValues.T.value('CoverageLevel[1]', 'nvarchar(50)')
FROM
#otherTransmitter.nodes('//Transmitters') AS ParamValues(T)
but its not working?
Your XML is not very well formatted for this kind of task - you don't have any useable child nodes inside <Transmitters> that you can depend on.
If your XML looked like this:
<Transmitters>
<Transmitter>
<Id>1</Id><CoverageLevel>2</CoverageLevel>
</Transmitter>
<Transmitter>
<Id>2</Id><CoverageLevel>4</CoverageLevel>
</Transmitter>
<Transmitter>
<Id>3</Id><CoverageLevel>6</CoverageLevel>
</Transmitter>
</Transmitters>
then you could use the XPath expression
#otherTransmitter.nodes('/Transmitters/Transmitter') AS ParamValues(T)
to get a hold of your values.
You don't have that - you only have individual <Id> and <CoverageLevel> inside your <Transmitters> - there's no "container" XML tag that holds together those elements that belong together.
There's really no XPath that will allow you to properly enumerate those nodes.....
Related
I'm trying to construct a soap message, and I was able to construct the entire message using a single select. Except the problem is, on only a few occasions the same node name is repeated twice.
So for example the required output result should be like so, with two separate id root nodes:
<SoapDocument>
<recordTarget>
<patientRole>
<id root="1.2.3.4" extension="1234567" />
<id root="1.2.3.5.6" extension="0123456789" />
</patientRole>
</recordTarget>
</SoapDocument>
I tried to use my sparse knowledge of xpath to construct the node names like so:
select
'1.2.3.4' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id[1]/#root',
'1234567' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id[1]/#extension',
'1.2.3.5.6' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id[2]/#root',
'0123456789' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id[2]/#extension'
FOR XML PATH('SoapDocument'),TYPE
Apparently xpath naming can't be applied to column names id[1] and id[2] like that? Am I missing something here or should the notation be different? What would be the easiest way to constuct the desired result?
From your question I assume, this is not tabular data, but fixed values and you are creating a medical document, assumably a CDA.
Try this:
SELECT
(
SELECT
'1.2.3.4' AS 'id/#root',
'1234567' AS 'id/#extension',
'',
'1.2.3.5.6' AS 'id/#root',
'0123456789' AS 'id/#extension'
FOR XML PATH('patientRole'),TYPE
) AS [SoapDocument/recordTarget]
FOR XML PATH('')
The result:
<SoapDocument>
<recordTarget>
<patientRole>
<id root="1.2.3.4" extension="1234567" />
<id root="1.2.3.5.6" extension="0123456789" />
</patientRole>
</recordTarget>
</SoapDocument>
Some explanation: The empty element in the middle allows you to place two elements with the same name in one query. There are various approaches how you get this into your surrounding tags. This is just one possibility.
UPDATE
I'd like to point to BdR's own answer! Great finding and worth an up-vote!
A little more elaboration on the answer from Shnugo, as it got me trying out some things using an "empty column".
If you do not give the emtpy column a name, it will reset to the XML root node. So the following columns will start from the XML root of the selection you are in at that point. However, if you explicitly name the empty separator column, then the following columns will continue in the hierarchy as set by that column name.
So the selection below will also result in the desired result. It's subtly different, but in my case it allows me to avoid using subselections.
select
'1.2.3.4' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id/#root',
'1234567' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id/#extension',
'' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole',
'1.2.3.5.6' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id/#root',
'0123456789' AS 'recordTarget/patientRole/id/#extension'
FOR XML PATH('SoapDocument'),TYPE
This should do the job:
WITH CTE AS (
SELECT *
FROM (VALUES('1.2.3.4','1234567'),
('1.2.3.5.6','0123456789')) V ([root], [extension]))
SELECT (SELECT (SELECT (SELECT [root] AS [#root],
[extension] AS [#extension]
FROM CTE
FOR XML PATH('id'), TYPE)
FOR XML PATH('patientRole'), TYPE)
FOR XML PATH ('recordTarget'), TYPE)
FOR XML PATH ('SoapDocument');
I have read dozens of posts and have tried numerous SQL queries to try and get this figured out. Sadly, I'm not a SQL expert (not even a novice) nor am I an XML expert. I understand basic queries from SQL, and understand XML tags, mostly.
I'm trying to query a database table, and have the data show a list of values from a column that contains XML. I'll give you an example of the data. I won't burden you with everything I have tried.
Here is an example of field inside of the column I need. So this is just one row, I would need to query the whole table to get all of the data I need.
When I select * from [table name] it returns hundreds of rows and when I double click in the column name of 'Document' on one row, I get the information I need.
It looks like this:
<code_set xmlns="">
<name>ExampleCodeTable</name>
<last_updated>2010-08-30T17:49:58.7919453Z</last_updated>
<code id="1" last_updated="2010-01-20T17:46:35.1658253-07:00"
start_date="1998-12-31T17:00:00-07:00"
end_date="9999-12-31T16:59:59.9999999-07:00">
<entry locale="en-US" name="T" description="Test1" />
</code>
<code id="2" last_updated="2010-01-20T17:46:35.1658253-07:00"
start_date="1998-12-31T17:00:00-07:00"
end_date="9999-12-31T16:59:59.9999999-07:00">
<entry locale="en-US" name="Z" description="Test2" />
</code>
<displayExpression>[Code] + ' - ' + [Description]</displayExpression>
<sortColumn>[Description]</sortColumn>
</code_set>
Ideally I would write it so it runs the query on the table and produces results like this:
Code Description
--------------------
(Data) (Data)
Any ideas? Is it even possible? The dozens of things I have tried that are always posted in stack, either return Nulls or fail.
Thanks for your help
Try something like this:
SELECT
CodeSetId = xc.value('#id', 'int'),
Description = xc.value('(entry/#description)[1]', 'varchar(50)')
FROM
dbo.YourTableNameHere
CROSS APPLY
YourXmlColumn.nodes('/code_set/code') AS XT(XC)
This basically uses the built-in XQuery to get an "in-memory" table (XT) with a single column (XC), each containing an XML fragment that represents each <code> node inside your <code_set> root node.
Once you have each of these XML fragments, you can use the .value() XQuery operator to "reach in" and grab some pieces of information from it, e.g. it's #id (attribute by the name of id), or the #description attribute on the contained <entry> subelement.
The following query will read the xml field in every row, then shred certain values into a tabular result set.
SELECT
-- get attribute [attribute name] from the parent node
parent.value('./#attribute name','varchar(max)') as ParentAttributeValue,
-- get the text value of the first child node
child.value('./text()', 'varchar(max)') as ChildNodeValueFromFirstChild,
-- get attribute attribute [attribute name] from the first child node
child.value('./#attribute name', 'varchar(max)') as ChildAttributeValueFromFirstChild
FROM
[table name]
CROSS APPLY
-- create a handle named parent that references that <parent node> in each row
[xml field name].nodes('//xpath to parent name') AS ParentName(parent)
CROSS APPLY
-- create a handle named child that references first <child node> in each row
parent.nodes('(xpath from parent/to child)[0]') AS FirstChildNode(child)
GO
Please provide the exact values you want to shred from the XML for a more precise answer.
I have an XML document that I'm working to build a schema for in order to bulk load these documents into a SQL Server table. The XML I'm focusing on looks like this:
<Coverage>
<CoverageCd>BI</CoverageCd>
<CoverageDesc>BI</CoverageDesc>
<Limit>
<FormatCurrencyAmt>
<Amt>30000.00</Amt>
</FormatCurrencyAmt>
<LimitAppliesToCd>PerPerson</LimitAppliesToCd>
</Limit>
<Limit>
<FormatCurrencyAmt>
<Amt>85000.00</Amt>
</FormatCurrencyAmt>
<LimitAppliesToCd>PerAcc</LimitAppliesToCd>
</Limit>
</Coverage>
<Coverage>
<CoverageCd>PD</CoverageCd>
<CoverageDesc>PD</CoverageDesc>
<Limit>
<FormatCurrencyAmt>
<Amt>50000.00</Amt>
</FormatCurrencyAmt>
<LimitAppliesToCd>Coverage</LimitAppliesToCd>
</Limit>
</Coverage>
Inside the Limit element, there's a child LimitAppliesToCd that I need to use to determine where the Amt element's value actually gets stored inside my table. Is this possible to do using the standard XML Bulk Load feature of SQL Server? Normally in XML I'd expect that the element would have an attribute containing the "PerPerson" or "PerAcc" information, but this standard we're using does not call for that.
If anyone has worked with the ACORD standard before, you might know what I'm working with here. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Don't know exactly what you are talking about, but this is a solution to get the information out of your XML.
Assumption: Your XML is already bulk-loaded into a declared variable #xml of type XML:
A CTE will pull the information out of your XML. The final query will then use PIVOT to put your data into the right column.
With a fitting table's structure the actual insert should be simple...
WITH DerivedTable AS
(
SELECT cov.value('CoverageCd[1]','varchar(max)') AS CoverageCd
,cov.value('CoverageDesc[1]','varchar(max)') AS CoverageDesc
,lim.value('(FormatCurrencyAmt/Amt)[1]','decimal(14,4)') AS Amt
,lim.value('LimitAppliesToCd[1]','varchar(max)') AS LimitAppliesToCd
FROM #xml.nodes('/root/Coverage') AS A(cov)
CROSS APPLY cov.nodes('Limit') AS B(lim)
)
SELECT p.*
FROM
(SELECT * FROM DerivedTable) AS tbl
PIVOT
(
MIN(Amt) FOR LimitAppliesToCD IN(PerPerson,PerAcc,Coverage)
) AS p
I have this query taken from the site www.SQLauthority.com:
DECLARE #MyXML XML
SET #MyXML = '<SampleXML>
<Colors>
<Color1>White</Color1>
<Color2>Blue</Color2>
<Color3>Black</Color3>
<Color4 Special="Light">Green</Color4>
<Color5>Red</Color5>
</Colors>
<Fruits>
<Fruits1>Apple</Fruits1>
<Fruits2>Pineapple</Fruits2>
<Fruits3>Grapes</Fruits3>
<Fruits4>Melon</Fruits4>
</Fruits>
</SampleXML>'
SELECT
a.b.value('Colors[1]/Color1[1]','varchar(10)') AS Color1,
a.b.value('Colors[1]/Color2[1]','varchar(10)') AS Color2,
a.b.value('Colors[1]/Color3[1]','varchar(10)') AS Color3,
a.b.value('Colors[1]/Color4[1]/#Special','varchar(10)')+' '+
+a.b.value('Colors[1]/Color4[1]','varchar(10)') AS Color4,
a.b.value('Colors[1]/Color5[1]','varchar(10)') AS Color5,
a.b.value('Fruits[1]/Fruits1[1]','varchar(10)') AS Fruits1,
a.b.value('Fruits[1]/Fruits2[1]','varchar(10)') AS Fruits2,
a.b.value('Fruits[1]/Fruits3[1]','varchar(10)') AS Fruits3,
a.b.value('Fruits[1]/Fruits4[1]','varchar(10)') AS Fruits4
FROM #MyXML.nodes('SampleXML') a(b)
I am not getting a better picture of how the nodes fetching from the xml data.
I have few queries regarding this.
what is a(b) in this?
how the structure will change if i have another node inside colors and all the existing child nodes appended to that?
ie:
<Colorss>
<Colors>
<Color1>White</Color1>
<Color2>Blue</Color2>
<Color3>Black</Color3>
<Color4 Special="Light">Green</Color4>
<Color5>Red</Color5>
</Colors>
<Colorss>
<Fruits>
<Fruits1>Apple</Fruits1>
<Fruits2>Pineapple</Fruits2>
<Fruits3>Grapes</Fruits3>
<Fruits4>Melon</Fruits4>
</Fruits>
what does it mean by a.b.value? When I mouse over it shows a is derived table. Can I check value of the table a?
Any help in this will be appreciated.
what is a(b) in this?
The call to .nodes('SampleXML') is a XQuery function which returns a pseudo table which contains one column of an XML fragment for each of the elements that this XPath expression matches - and the a(b) is the table alias (a) for that column, and b is the name of the column in that pseudo table containing the XML fragments.
what does it mean by a.b.value?
This is based on the above - a is the table alias for that temporary, inline pseudo table, b is the column name for the column in that table, and .value() is another XQuery function that will extract a single value from XML, based on the XPath expression (first argument) and it will return it as the datatype specified in the second argument.
You should check out those introductions to XQuery support in SQL Server to understand better:
Introduction to XQuery in SQL Server 2005
XQuery basics
and there are numerous other introductions and tutorials on XQuery - just search with your favorite search engine and you'll get tons of hits!
here's my stab # it:
a-refers to root;b-refers to root and child node
DECLARE #MyXML XML
SET #MyXML = '<SampleXML>
<Colors>
<Color1>White</Color1>
<Color2>Blue</Color2>
<Color3>Black</Color3>
<Color4 Special="Light">Green</Color4>
<Color5>Red
<Color6>Black44</Color6>
<Color7>Black445</Color7>
</Color5>
</Colors>
<Fruits>
<Fruits1>Apple</Fruits1>
<Fruits2>Pineapple</Fruits2>
<Fruits3>Grapes</Fruits3>
<Fruits4>Melon</Fruits4>
</Fruits>
</SampleXML>'
to get an inner child
SELECT
a.c.value('Colors1/Color11','varchar(10)') AS Color1,
a.c.value('Colors1/Color21','varchar(10)') AS Color2,
a.c.value('Colors1/Color31','varchar(10)') AS Color3,
a.c.value('Colors1/Color41/#Special','varchar(10)') AS Color4,
a.c.value('Colors1/Color51','varchar(10)') AS Color5,
a.c.value('Colors1/Color51/Color71','varchar(50)') AS Color6a,
a.c.value('Colors1/Color51/Color61','varchar(50)') AS Color6b, a.c.value('Fruits1/Fruits11','varchar(10)') AS Fruits1,
a.c.value('Fruits1/Fruits21','varchar(10)') AS Fruits2,
a.c.value('Fruits1/Fruits31','varchar(10)') AS Fruits3,
a.c.value('Fruits1/Fruits41','varchar(10)') AS Fruits4
FROM #MyXML.nodes('SampleXML') a(c)
A nodes() method invocation with the query expression /root/Color(n) would return a rowset with three rows, each containing a logical copy of the original XML document, and with the context item set to one of the nodes
see here
I have an XML file where the nodes that I need the data from are all named the same. I understand how to access the first (or second record) so the following query only gives me the second author (the <a1> tag). How do I get all the authors as a single column ?
DECLARE #MyXML XML
SET #MyXML = '<refworks>
<reference>
<rt>Journal Article</rt>
<sr>Print(0)</sr>
<id>869</id>
<a1>Aabye,Martine G.</a1>
<a1>Hermansen,Thomas Stig</a1>
<a1>Ruhwald,Morten</a1>
<a1>PrayGod,George</a1>
<a1>Faurholt-Jepsen,Daniel</a1>
<a1>Jeremiah,Kidola</a1>
<a1>Faurholt-Jepsen,Maria</a1>
<a1>Range,Nyagosya</a1>
</reference>
</refworks>'
SELECT
author.value('(a1)[2]', 'varchar(MAX)') AS 'Author'
FROM #MyXML.nodes('/refworks/reference') AS ref(author)
Try this :-
SELECT
author.value('./text()[1]', 'varchar(MAX)') AS 'Author'
FROM #MyXML.nodes('//refworks/reference/child::node()') AS ref(author)
where author.value('local-name(.)[1]', 'varchar(100)') ='a1'
child::node() represents an axis specifier which is child and :: is the axis separator.
For understanding child axis which is used to drill down in the node can be found in this MSDN document.
or manipulating xml data in sql server
Updated :-
A much simplier way You were on the right track .Specify the child node in the from clause for filtering the data
SELECT
author.value('(.)[1]', 'varchar(MAX)') AS 'Author'
FROM #MyXML.nodes('/refworks/reference/a1') AS ref(author)