3

I have a table which looks like the following:

date          code                name    score         set
09/09/12     967873         Team A         24            1
09/09/12     967873         Team B         22            1
09/09/12     967873         Team A         21            2 
09/09/12     967873         Team B         16            2
02/04/12     965454         Team X         21            1
02/04/12     965454         Team Y         19            1
02/04/12     965454         Team X         21            2
02/04/12     965454         Team Y         19            2

you guessed it right! it's a volleyball match! however, I would like my output to be in a single line. For example:

date           code               Teams                 Set-1    Set-2     Set-3
09/09/12      967873             Team A VS.Team B       24-22    21-16       -
and so on.... 

**Notice that the game could have a third set as well

I will need some kind of self join to refine the above format to the format that is easier for Users view...Let me know if you need more details.

Thanks,

2
  • How do you determine which team gets listed first? Nov 6, 2012 at 19:14
  • as long as the score matches the team in each set,the order of the teams do not matter Nov 6, 2012 at 19:23

4 Answers 4

7

The query could look like this:

with matches as (
   select "DATE", code, name,
      max(case when "SET" = 1 then score end) score_1,
      max(case when "SET" = 2 then score end) score_2,
      max(case when "SET" = 3 then score end) score_3,
      row_number() over(partition by "DATE", code order by name) team_no
    from games
    group by "DATE", code, name
)
select a."DATE", a.code, a.name || ' vs. ' || b.name teams,
  a.score_1 || '-' || b.score_1 set_1,
  a.score_2 || '-' || b.score_2 set_2,
  a.score_3 || '-' || b.score_3 set_3
from matches a
join matches b on a."DATE" = b."DATE" and a.code = b.code
where a.team_no = 1 and b.team_no = 2;

date and set are rather unfortunate column names.

The query works in 3 steps:

  1. The records are aggregated to create a single row per team and match. In that process, the score is assigned to one of the three columns set_1, set_2, set_3.
  2. Row numbers are assigned to each row, starting at 1 for each match. The result is that one team is assigned 1 and the other one is assigned 2 (column team_no).
  3. The resulting table is joined to itself, the left side for teams with no. 1 and the right side for teams with no. 2 using the match (date and code) as the join condition. The result is one row per match with the names and scores of both teams.
1
  • Thank you so much Codo! It works beautifully:)) And thanks for going through the process as well! now I understand it Nov 9, 2012 at 17:08
2

First, group the data by "date", code, "set" to LISTAGG the teams and the scores. Then pivot the results on the scores column. Here's the SQL for it:

WITH grouped AS (
  SELECT
    "date", code, "set",
    LISTAGG(name,  ' VS. ') WITHIN GROUP (ORDER BY name) AS teams,
    LISTAGG(score, '-'    ) WITHIN GROUP (ORDER BY name) AS score
  FROM matches
  GROUP BY
    "date", code, "set"
)
,    pivoted AS (
  SELECT
    "date", code, teams,
    nvl("1", '-') AS set1,
    nvl("2", '-') AS set2,
    nvl("3", '-') AS set3
  FROM grouped
  PIVOT (
    MAX(score) FOR "set" IN (1, 2, 3)
  ) p
)
SELECT * FROM pivoted
;

Please have a look at this query at SQL Fiddle too.

1

I'd do sg like this, if the name of the table is let's say VOLLEYBALL:

SELECT temp.date, temp.code, 
    temp.team1 || ' vs. ' || temp.team2 AS teams, 
    (SELECT v.score FROM volleyball v WHERE v.code = temp.code AND v.name = team1 AND v.set = 1) || '-' || 
        (SELECT v.score FROM volleyball v WHERE v.code = temp.code AND v.name = team2 AND v.set = 1) AS set1, 
    (SELECT v.score FROM volleyball v WHERE v.code = temp.code AND v.name = team1 AND v.set = 2) || '-' || 
        (SELECT v.score FROM volleyball v WHERE v.code = temp.code AND v.name = team2 AND v.set = 2) AS set2, 
    nvl((SELECT v.score FROM volleyball v WHERE v.code = temp.code AND v.name = team1 AND v.set = 3) || '-' || 
        (SELECT v.score FROM volleyball v WHERE v.code = temp.code AND v.name = team2 AND v.set = 3)
        , '-') AS set3 -- optional, if no results, then it will be a '-' 
FROM
    (SELECT v.date, v.code, 
        min(v.name) AS team1,  max(v.name) AS team2 
    FROM volleyball v 
    GROUP BY v.date, v.code) temp; 

This will result a one row summary.

4
  • You probably want SELECT score FROM instead of SELECT 1 FROM. And you don't need nvl(XXX, '-'); XXX will be sufficient.
    – Codo
    Nov 6, 2012 at 19:43
  • Yes, sorry. I didn't finish it. Regarding nvl: as I remember, NULL || '-' || NULL is NULL, that's why I put it in a nvl function. Nov 6, 2012 at 19:57
  • 2
    No, NULL || '-' || NULL is '-', at least in Oracle.
    – Codo
    Nov 6, 2012 at 20:06
  • Ok, it really is. I didn't have a database at hand, but I could now check it. Nov 6, 2012 at 20:21
1

To return the required results without needing a join, try:

select "date", 
       code, 
       min_name || ' VS. ' || max_name teams,
       sum(case when "set" = 1 and name = min_name then score end) || '-' || 
          sum(case when "set" = 1 and name = max_name then score end) "Set-1",
       sum(case when "set" = 2 and name = min_name then score end) || '-' || 
          sum(case when "set" = 2 and name = max_name then score end) "Set-2",
       sum(case when "set" = 3 and name = min_name then score end) || '-' || 
          sum(case when "set" = 3 and name = max_name then score end) "Set-3"
from (select g.*,
             min(name) over (partition by "date", code) min_name,
             max(name) over (partition by "date", code) max_name
      from games)
group by "date", code

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.