I want to update a table with consecutive numbering starting with 1. The update has a where clause so only results that meet the clause will be renumbered. Can I accomplish this efficiently without using a temp table?
|
|
This probably depends on your database, but here is a solution for MySQL 5 that involves using a variable:
You should probably edit your question and indicate which database you're using however. Edit: I found a solution utilizing T-SQL for SQL Server. It's very similar to the MySQL method:
|
|||||||||||
|
|
For Microsoft SQL Server 2005/2008. ROW_NUMBER() function was added in 2005.
EDIT: For SQL Server 2000:
NOTE: When I tested the increment of @RN appeared to happen prior to setting the the column to @RN, so the above gives numbers starting at 1. EDIT: I just noticed that is appears you want to create multiple sequential numbers within the table. Depending on the requirements, you may be able to do this in a single pass with SQL Server 2005/2008, by adding
|
||||
|
|
|
In oracle this works:
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B19306_01/server.102/b14200/pseudocolumns009.htm#i1006297 |
|||
|
|
|
If you want to create a new PrimaryKey column, use just this:
|
|||
|
|
|
Join to a Numbers table? It involves an extra table, but it wouldn't be temporary -- you'd keep the numbers table around as a utility. or http://www.sqlservercentral.com/articles/Advanced+Querying/2547/ (the latter requires a free registration, but I find it to be a very good source of tips & techniques for MS SQL Server, and a lot is applicable to any SQL implementation). |
|||
|
|
|
I've used this technique for years to populate ordinals and sequentially numbered columns. However I recently discovered an issue with it when running on SQL Server 2012. It would appear that internally the query engine is applying the update using multiple threads and the predicate portion of the UPDATE is not being handled in a thread-safe manner. To make it work again I had to reconfigure SQL Server's max degree of parallelism down to 1 core.
Without this you'll find that most sequential numbers are duplicated throughout the table. |
|||
|
|
|
It is possible, but only via some very complicated queries - basically you need a subquery that counts the number of records selected so far, and uses that as the sequence ID. I wrote something similar at one point - it worked, but it was a lot of pain. To be honest, you'd be better off with a temporary table with an autoincrement field. |
|||
|
|