4

I had a typical non-normalized table (tempTable) with multiple numbered columns (rep1,rep2,...). So i wrote a script to insert the non-normalized data into a normalized table (myTable):

insert into myTable
select idRep,rep FROM
(
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep1,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep2,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep3,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep4,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep5,'') as rep FROM tempTable
) as t

Note: The table myTable also contains an auto-incremented IDENTITY column as its PRIMARY KEY.

The order rep1, rep2, rep3, rep4, rep5 is important in my scenario. Strangely, when I executed the script, the data wasn't inserted in the correct order such as the auto-generated id '1000' had the value from 'rep3' and the id '1001' had the value from 'rep1'.

Why is that? How was the script executed?

6
  • 2
    The order of an insert is not guaranteed
    – paparazzo
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:25
  • 1
    Never tought of that, how is the execution done? I'm interested in understanding this.
    – Francis P
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:32
  • But if you use an OrderBy then the Iden is correct. According to this blogs.msdn.com/b/sqltips/archive/2005/07/20/441053.aspx
    – paparazzo
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:33
  • Is your IDENTITY column idRep?
    – Kermit
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:37
  • No, since it is selected from tempTable.
    – Francis P
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:39

4 Answers 4

9

The reason it is not going in the order you expect when using UNION is that union attempts to impose uniquness, so it is processing all of those rows together and bringing them out in the order most convenient for the engine.

If you switch to UNION ALL (which does not try to impose uniqueness) as Parado suggested it will not do the processing and they will go into the table in the order you put them in, almost all the time. This however is not gaurunteed and certain very unusual circumstances going on in other processes (especially ones that somehow touch on your tempTable) can affect it.

If you use an order by as Kash suggests then that will gauruntee the order of the ids (which can matter), but not technically the order that the rows get inserted (which very rarely matters in practice).

There is a good summary of some of this on MSDN.

So, that takes care of the why. As for the how to get what you actually want, I would use Kash's suggestion of adding a column to use with an order by clause, but I would use UNION ALL instead of UNION. Using UNION is like adding and implicit "distinct" requirement, which takes up processor cycles and makes the query plan more complicated.

0
4

Your outer Select has no order, hence the INSERT is not ordered like it seems.

There are a few Ordering Guarantees in SQL Server and an INSERT of SELECT with ORDER BY guarantees computation of identity values as quoted:

INSERT queries that use SELECT with ORDER BY to populate rows guarantees how identity values are computed but not the order in which the rows are inserted

Change your SQL to make it ordered:

insert into myTable
select idRep,rep FROM
(
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep1,'') as rep, 1 as Grp FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep2,'') as rep, 2 as Grp FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep3,'') as rep, 3 as Grp FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep4,'') as rep, 4 as Grp FROM tempTable
    union
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep5,'') as rep, 5 as Grp FROM tempTable
) as t ORDER BY Grp
12
  • I don't think this will guarantee the order.
    – Kermit
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:35
  • 1
    You should also use UNION ALL.
    – Kermit
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:37
  • @njk So SELECT with ORDER BY doesn't guarantee the ordered insertion of those values? Why is that?
    – Francis P
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:38
  • UNION has been specifically used by OP to weed out duplicates. Why would you use UNION ALL?
    – Kash
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:39
  • @Kash The OP does not mention removal of duplicates. The requirement that they are moving from non-normalized to normalized would hint that removal of duplicates would be a loss of fidelity.
    – Kermit
    Sep 10, 2012 at 21:41
2

Try with union all. It does't sort the data:

insert into myTable
select idRep,rep FROM
(
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep1,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union all
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep2,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union all
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep3,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union all
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep4,'') as rep FROM tempTable
    union all
    select idRep, ISNULL(rep5,'') as rep FROM tempTable
) as t
0
0

Here is another way to do this without unions altogether. It references the source table only once. Sorting is simple.

declare @numbers table (number int)
insert into @numbers (number)
values (1),(2),(3),(4),(5)

insert into mytable
select 
case number
    when 1 then rep1
    when 2 then rep2
    when 3 then rep3
    when 4 then rep4
    when 5 then rep5
    end as rep
from temptable cross join @numbers n
order by number asc, id asc

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