Assume the following table:
MS SQL Server 2012 Schema Setup:
CREATE TABLE entries
(
[entryID] [uniqueidentifier] NOT NULL,
[bOpen] [bit] NULL,
[nextEntryID] [uniqueidentifier] NULL,
);
INSERT INTO entries
(entryID, bOpen, nextEntryID)
VALUES
('21572F4C-BA63-489B-9205-AD1451CEE411', 0, NULL),
('FF4ADC83-1270-418B-8E31-FD1AEA2C1ADF', 0, '21572F4C-BA63-489B-9205-AD1451CEE411'),
('7ED7AF83-6595-4848-AFDF-4F7D54889F80', 1, NULL),
('C7AA25D3-B70D-45CB-A143-CF380E6FD0D3', 1, '7ED7AF83-6595-4848-AFDF-4F7D54889F80'),
('ADA3312E-6FF2-4EC6-9FE3-C994D2FCD16F', 1, 'C7AA25D3-B70D-45CB-A143-CF380E6FD0D3'),
('9BE0F5FA-09F0-423C-8173-98AD73522412', 0, NULL),
('5019558E-73FC-4A10-B526-49DB2253B9B9', 1, 'B2EF093A-45B4-4780-A5F5-ECEE02A26274'),
('B2EF093A-45B4-4780-A5F5-ECEE02A26274', 0, NULL)
Query 1:
select * from entries
| ENTRYID | BOPEN | NEXTENTRYID |
|--------------------------------------|-------|--------------------------------------|
| 21572F4C-BA63-489B-9205-AD1451CEE411 | 0 | (null) |
| FF4ADC83-1270-418B-8E31-FD1AEA2C1ADF | 0 | 21572F4C-BA63-489B-9205-AD1451CEE411 |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 7ED7AF83-6595-4848-AFDF-4F7D54889F80 | 1 | (null) |
| C7AA25D3-B70D-45CB-A143-CF380E6FD0D3 | 1 | 7ED7AF83-6595-4848-AFDF-4F7D54889F80 |
| ADA3312E-6FF2-4EC6-9FE3-C994D2FCD16F | 1 | C7AA25D3-B70D-45CB-A143-CF380E6FD0D3 |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 9BE0F5FA-09F0-423C-8173-98AD73522412 | 0 | (null) |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 5019558E-73FC-4A10-B526-49DB2253B9B9 | 1 | B2EF093A-45B4-4780-A5F5-ECEE02A26274 |
| B2EF093A-45B4-4780-A5F5-ECEE02A26274 | 0 | (null) |
As you may already have noticed, I have a field nextEntryID
, which contains the linked entryID
.
I seperated the pairs with hypens in the result.
The most interesting pair would be the two last entries. Both are linked to each other but have a different bOpen
value (1
and 0
respectively).
I'd now like to find out all entries/pairs in my table, where the starting entry has bOpen = 1
and is linked to another entry with bOpen = 0
.
Theoretically, there can be unlimited entries linked to each other, so I guess we need some kind of recursion in this case?
Or is there another way for this?
Additional info (thanks @david.pfx):
- The structure is like this and I would rather not change the structure, although it would be possible to add changes.
- The "depth" of the linked entries is not fixed at 2 or 3; I'd guess that the depth would not go over 4 most of the times, but it could be possible.
- The
IDs
are globally unique - Any approach/suggestion would be great
NEWID()
are getting...a new id. I did that because it just doesn't matter really. I thought that was clear from the question, but it seems to cause confusion, so I'll edit anyway.