2

here's my problem:

I have a table with Names and Addresses, e.g.

Name  |  Address       | Updated
----------------------------------
a     |  12 lane       | 1/1/2011
b     |  34 avenue     | 1/1/2011
c     |  56 district   | 1/1/2011
a     |  78 avenue     | 8/8/2011
b     |  90 lane       | 8/8/2011
a     |  83 district   | 9/9/2011
a     |  39 road       | 10/10/2011

As you can see, it's possible for people to have multiple addresses. Let's say the maximum number of addresses one person has is 5.

I'm only interested in getting the newest 3 addresses for each person, such that the table would look like:

Name  |  Address_1      |   Address_2       |  Address_3
--------------------------------------------------------------
a     | 78 avenue       |   83 district     | 39 road
b     | 34 avenue       |   90 lane         | NULL
c     | 56 district     |   NULL            | NULL

Note that a's first entry "12 lane" doesn't appear

I've been reading other examples shown on stackoverflow, but i'm not sure if Pivot tables are suitable for what I need, since the addresses are all different

Thanks in advance for any help rendered!

2
  • What you have done till right now?
    – SMK
    Sep 4, 2012 at 8:09
  • I've been trying to concatenate all the addresses into one column.. about to try to split them up into the 3 address fields i need to populate. Thanks for the blazing quick replies Johan and Nikola! I'm gonna try Nikola's method first as it looks short and sweet
    – d0h
    Sep 4, 2012 at 8:30

3 Answers 3

6

You can pivot it. Key point is assigning row_numbers to addresses in descending order of updates. This produces column names 1, 2, and 3 (and 4, 5 - but these will be ignored by pivot command).

Here is Sql Fiddle with example.

select name, 
       [1] Address_1,
       [2] Address_2,
       [3] Address_3
from
(
  select name,
         address,
         row_number() over (partition by name
                            order by updated desc) rn
    from table1
) o
pivot (min(address) for rn in ([1], [2], [3])) p
1
  • thanks Nikola, this works perfectly and is elegantly written!
    – d0h
    Sep 4, 2012 at 8:44
1

Here is a simple query using ROW_NUMBER()

Since you only want three address columns this might be suitable. The solution is not suitable for a non fix amount of columns.

;with testdata(Name, Address, Updated)
as
(
select 'a','12 lane',convert(datetime, '1/1/2011')
union all
select 'b','34 avenue',convert(datetime, '1/1/2011')
union all
select 'c','56 district',convert(datetime, '1/1/2011')
union all
select 'a','78 avenue',convert(datetime, '8/8/2011')
union all
select 'b','90 lane',convert(datetime, '8/8/2011')
union all
select 'a','83 district',convert(datetime, '9/9/2011')
union all
select 'a','39 road',convert(datetime, '10/10/2011')
)
,tmp
as
(
select  * 
        ,row_number() over(PARTITION by Name order by Updated desc) as rn
from testdata
)
select  x.Name
        ,x.Address
        ,y.Address
        ,z.Address
from    tmp x
left join   tmp y
    on  x.Name = y.Name
    and y.rn = 2
left join   tmp z
    on  x.Name = z.Name
    and z.rn = 3
where x.rn = 1
0

You may consider to use two queries:

  • The first using the DISTINCT key to get the unique "names".

  • The second, in a loop over the unique names, to get for each name the 3 most recent addresses, using the TOP clause (in your case TOP 3) and an "ORDER BY Updated DESC" specification.

  • Of course, the queries may be combined using a suitable JOIN.

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