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Let's say I have some data, either in a SQL Server 2008 table or a [table]-typed variable:

author_id     review_id     question_id     answer_id
88540         99001         1               719
88540         99001         2               720
88540         99001         3               721
88540         99001         4               722
88540         99001         5               723
36414         24336         1               302
36414         24336         2               303
36414         24336         3               304
36414         24336         4               305
36414         24336         5               306

I want to retrieve the data as a result set that looks like this:

author_id     review_id     1     2     3     4     5
88540         99001         719   720   721   722   723
36414         24336         302   303   304   305   306

I suspect the PIVOT operator is what I need (according to this post, anyway), but I can't figure out how to get started, especially when the number of question_id rows in the table can vary. In the above example, it's 5, but in another query the table might be populated with 7 distinct questions.

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4 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

Actually, you'd be better off doing this in the client. Suppose you're using Reporting Services, get the data as per your first result set and display it using a Matrix, with author_id and review_id in the Row Group, question_id in the Column Group, and MAX(answer_id) in the middle.

A query is doable, but you'd need dynamic SQL right now.

...something like:

DECLARE @QuestionList nvarchar(max);
SELECT @QuestionList = STUFF(
(SELECT ', ' + quotename(question_id)
FROM YourTable
GROUP BY question_id
ORDER BY question_id
FOR XML PATH(''))
, 1, 2, '');

DECLARE @qry nvarchar(max);
SET @qry = '
SELECT author_id, review_id, ' + @QuestionList + 
FROM (SELECT author_id, review_id, question_id, answer_id
      FROM YourTable
     ) 
PIVOT
(MAX(AnswerID) FOR question_id IN (' + @QuestionList + ')) pvt
ORDER BY author_id, review_id;';

exec sp_executesql @qry;
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This appears to be what I need. I'll give it a shot and report back -- thank you! – AspNyc Nov 5 '09 at 1:19
1  
Please bear in mind the subquery. If you just use "SELECT * FROM YourTable", then any other columns involved will affect the implicit grouping that the PIVOT function provides. And if you have any errors, comment out the exec line, replacing it with select @qry – Rob Farley Nov 5 '09 at 1:33
I never use [SELECT *] anymore -- I always explicitly state the columns I access -- so that won't be an issue. And yes, I was using [select @qry] for a while so that I could see/debug the generates SQL statement before it ran. Your code worked as promised -- thank you so much for your help! – AspNyc Nov 5 '09 at 14:08
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select * 
from @t pivot
(
    max(answer_id) for question_id in ([1],[2],[3],[4],[5])
) pivotT

The only way to vary the list ([1],[2],[3],[4],[5]) would be to build this query in a string (dynamically) and then execute it.

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Here you have great example and explanation.

In your case it would be like this:

SELECT author_id, review_id, [1], [2], [3], [4], [5]
FROM 
    (
        SELECT author_id, review_id, question_id, answer_id
        FROM the_table
    ) up
PIVOT (MAX(answer_id) FOR question_id IN ([1],[2],[3],[4],[5])) AS pvt
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See this answer

Basically, you pre-inspect the data to get the columns and then dynamically generate the SQL using the dynamic pivot list. There's really no non-dynamic way, because the definition of the columns in the set you want to return is not fixed.

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