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Let's say I have the following table:

CustomerID ParentID Name
========== ======== ====
1          null     John
2          1        James
3          2        Jenna
4          3        Jennifer
5          3        Peter
6          5        Alice
7          5        Steve
8          1        Larry

I want to retrieve in one query all the descendants of James (Jenna,Jennifer,Peter, Alice, Steve). Thanks, Pablo.

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In What RDBMS the solution should run? If it's Oracle, then learn about CONNECT BY PRIOR – Salamander2007 Oct 27 '08 at 7:49
sorry, forgot to mention, in MSSQL 2005 – pablito Oct 27 '08 at 7:50

4 Answers

up vote 28 down vote accepted

On SQL Server 2005 you can use CTEs (Common Table Expressions) :

with Hierachy(CustomerID, ParentID, Name, Level)
as
(
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name, 0 as Level
    from Customers c
    where c.CustomerID = 2 -- insert parameter here
    union all
    select c.CustomerID, c.ParentID, c.Name, ch.Level + 1
    from Customers c
    inner join Hierachy ch
    on c.ParentId = ch.CustomerID
)
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name
from Hierachy
where Level > 0
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If you don't want to use recursion or you need to get parent from a child you can implement the solution from Rob Volk's article on sqlteam: sqlteam.com/article/more-trees-hierarchies-in-sql – nzic Oct 25 '12 at 13:30

For bottom up use mathieu's answer with a little modification:



with Hierachy(CustomerID, ParentID, Name, Level)
as
(
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name, 0 as Level
    from Customers c
    where c.CustomerID = 2 -- insert parameter here
    union all
    select c.CustomerID, c.ParentID, c.Name, ch.Level + 1
    from Customers c
    inner join Hierachy ch

    -- EDITED HERE --
    on ch.ParentId = c.CustomerID
    ----------------- 

)
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name
from Hierachy
where Level > 0


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You can't do recursion in SQL without stored procedures. The way to solve this is using Nested Sets, they basically model a tree in SQL as a set.

Notice that this will require a change to the current data model or possibly figuring out how to create a view on the original model.

Postgresql example (using very few postgresql extensions, just SERIAL and ON COMMIT DROP, most RDBMSes will have similar functionality):

Setup:

CREATE TABLE objects(
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    name TEXT,
    lft INT,
    rgt INT
);

INSERT INTO objects(name, lft, rgt) VALUES('The root of the tree', 1, 2);

Adding a child:

START TRANSACTION;

-- postgresql doesn't support variables so we create a temporary table that 
-- gets deleted after the transaction has finished.

CREATE TEMP TABLE left_tmp(
    lft INT
) ON COMMIT DROP; -- not standard sql

-- store the left of the parent for later use
INSERT INTO left_tmp (lft) VALUES((SELECT lft FROM objects WHERE name = 'The parent of the newly inserted node'));

-- move all the children already in the set to the right
-- to make room for the new child
UPDATE objects SET rgt = rgt + 2 WHERE rgt > (SELECT lft FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1);
UPDATE objects SET lft = lft + 2 WHERE lft > (SELECT lft FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1);

-- insert the new child
INSERT INTO objects(name, lft, rgt) VALUES(
    'The name of the newly inserted node', 
    (SELECT lft + 1 FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1), 
    (SELECT lft + 2 FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1)
);

COMMIT;

Display a trail from bottom to top:

SELECT
    parent.id, parent.lft
FROM
    objects AS current_node
INNER JOIN
    objects AS parent
ON
    current_node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rgt
WHERE
    current_node.name = 'The name of the deepest child'
ORDER BY
    parent.lft;

Display the entire tree:

SELECT
    REPEAT('   ', CAST((COUNT(parent.id) - 1) AS INT)) || '- ' || current_node.name AS indented_name
FROM
    objects current_node
INNER JOIN
    objects parent
ON
    current_node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rgt
GROUP BY
    current_node.name,
    current_node.lft
ORDER BY
    current_node.lft;

Select everything down from a certain element of the tree:

SELECT
    current_node.name AS node_name
FROM
    objects current_node
INNER JOIN
    objects parent
ON
    current_node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rgt
AND
    parent.name = 'child'
GROUP BY
    current_node.name,
    current_node.lft
ORDER BY
    current_node.lft;
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2  
But you can, see mathieu's answer. – Mark S. Rasmussen Oct 27 '08 at 8:39
The code I posted uses a technique applicable to any ANSI-SQL database because the OP forgot to mention the RDBMS he was using in his original post (see the comments for that post). – Jasper Bekkers Oct 27 '08 at 9:02

Unless I'm missing something, recursion isn't necessary...

SELECT d.NAME FROM Customers As d
INNER JOIN Customers As p ON p.CustomerID = d.ParentID
WHERE p.Name = 'James'
share|improve this answer
you won't get Jennifer,Peter, Alice, Steve this way – mathieu Oct 27 '08 at 21:04

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