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I have [UserAliases] (UserId, Alias) table with multiple Aliases per user. I need to query it and return all aliases for a given user, the trick is to return them all in one column.

Example:

UserId/Alias
1/MrX
1/MrY
1/MrA
2/Abc
2/Xyz

I want the query result in the following format:

UserId/Alias
1/ MrX, MrY, MrA
2/ Abc, Xyz

Thank you.

I'm using MSSQL Server 2005.

p.s. actual t-sql query would be appreciated :)

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Related question (for others with the same problem): stackoverflow.com/questions/102317/… – Eduardo Molteni Jan 29 '09 at 14:02
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10 Answers

up vote 26 down vote accepted

You can use a function with COALESCE.

CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[GetAliasesById]
(
    @userID int
)
RETURNS varchar(max)
AS
BEGIN
    declare @output varchar(max)
    select @output = COALESCE(@output + ', ', '') + alias
    from UserAliases
    where userid = @userID

    return @output
END

GO

SELECT UserID, dbo.GetAliasesByID(UserID)
FROM UserAliases
GROUP BY UserID

GO
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This worked fabulously for me. – DanM Apr 16 '09 at 18:48
This is now better done with the XML PATH trick – gbn Dec 12 '11 at 16:11
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Well... I see that an answer was already accepted... but I think you should see another solutions anyway:

/* EXAMPLE */
DECLARE @UserAliases TABLE(UserId INT , Alias VARCHAR(10))
INSERT INTO @UserAliases (UserId,Alias) SELECT 1,'MrX'
     UNION ALL SELECT 1,'MrY' UNION ALL SELECT 1,'MrA'
     UNION ALL SELECT 2,'Abc' UNION ALL SELECT 2,'Xyz'

/* QUERY */
;WITH tmp AS ( SELECT DISTINCT UserId FROM @UserAliases )
SELECT 
    LEFT(tmp.UserId, 10) +
    '/ ' +
    STUFF(
            (   SELECT ', '+Alias 
                FROM @UserAliases 
                WHERE UserId = tmp.UserId 
                FOR XML PATH('') 
            ) 
            , 1, 2, ''
        ) AS [UserId/Alias]
FROM tmp

/* -- OUTPUT
  UserId/Alias
  1/ MrX, MrY, MrA
  2/ Abc, Xyz    
*/
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You can either loop through the rows with a cursor and append to a field in a temp table, or you could use the COALESCE function to concatenate the fields.

Here's a link to a good explanation of COALESCE, which is a much cleaner way than using cursors:

http://databases.aspfaq.com/general/how-do-i-concatenate-strings-from-a-column-into-a-single-row.html

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My boss wrote up an article on this way back 2003: Concatenation with COALESCE

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There are some techniques to achieve this here: http://databases.aspfaq.com/general/how-do-i-concatenate-strings-from-a-column-into-a-single-row.html

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Have a look at this thread already on StackOverflow, it conveniently gives you a T-SQL example.

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this is one of the fastest and simplest ways to do what you need without the need for a UDF: http://weblogs.sqlteam.com/mladenp/archive/2007/06/01/60220.aspx

there's one other way using a numbers table that is faster for really large datasets but i don't think you'll need that.

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Sorry, read the question wrong the first time. You can do something like this:

declare @result varchar(max)

--must "initialize" result for this to work select @result = ''

select @result = @result + alias FROM aliases WHERE username='Bob'

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DECLARE @Str varchar(500)

SELECT @Str=COALESCE(@Str,'') + CAST(ID as varchar(10)) + ',' FROM dbo.fcUser

SELECT @Str

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group_concat() sounds like what you're looking for.

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/group-by-functions.html#function_group-concat

since you're on mssql, i just googled "group_concat mssql" and found a bunch of hits to recreate group_concat functionality. here's one of the hits i found:

http://www.stevenmapes.com/index.php?/archives/23-Recreating-MySQL-GROUP_CONCAT-In-MSSQL-Cross-Tab-Query.html

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1  
the question is targeted at MS-SQL – pointernil Sep 23 '08 at 18:47
But the answer contains information on how to find a similar function in MySQL – Kevin Peno Mar 18 '11 at 16:10
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