I have the following query which returns the salary of all employees. This work perfectly but I need to collect extra data that I will aggregate into one cell (see Result Set 2).

How can I aggregate data into a comma separated list? A little bit like what Sum does, but I need a string in return.

SELECT Employee.Id, SUM(Pay) as Salary
FROM Employee
INNER JOIN PayCheck ON PayCheck.EmployeeId = Employee.Id
GROUP BY Employee.Id

Result Set 1

Employee.Id              Salary
-----------------------------------
          1                 150
          2                 250
          3                 350

I need:

Result Set 2

Employee.Id              Salary                 Data
----------------------------------------------------
          1                 150      One, Two, Three
          2                 250      Four, Five, Six
          3                 350      Seven
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72% accept rate
possible duplicate of How do I Create a Comma-Separated List using a SQL Query? and of stackoverflow.com/questions/3087684/… @Martin this last one has a better example of using it in a 'GROUP BY' There is also an option of using a custom CLR aggregate. – Martin Smith Jun 25 '10 at 20:05
1  
Maybe I missed something here, but where are you getting the extra data from? – VoodooChild Jun 25 '10 at 20:06
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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

For SQL Server 2005+, use the STUFF function and FOR XML PATH:

WITH summary_cte AS (
   SELECT Employee.Id, SUM(Pay) as Salary
     FROM Employee
     JOIN PayCheck ON PayCheck.EmployeeId = Employee.Id
 GROUP BY Employee.Id)
SELECT sc.id, 
       sc.salary,
       STUFF((SELECT ','+ yt.data
                FROM your_table yt
               WHERE yt.id = sc.id
            GROUP BY yt.data
             FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE).value('.','VARCHAR(max)'), 1, 1, '')
  FROM summary_cte sc

But you're missing details about where the data you want to turn into a comma delimited string is, and how it relates to an employee record...

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this does not properly handle XML special characters like > and &. So if your_table.data contained one & two you'd get one & two in the result set. There is a nifty way to handle this, see: stackoverflow.com/questions/5031204/… – KM. Feb 17 '11 at 16:23
@KM: Cool - updated, upvote to you! – OMG Ponies Feb 17 '11 at 16:27
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I don't have my code in front of me, or I would show you a quick example, but I would look into writing a CLR aggregate for this. Its very simple. There are some automatically created method to use, and they're just for collection (add to a List<> object or something), Merge (merging multiple lists created in multiple threads), and an output (take the list and turn it into a string - String.Join(",", list.ToArray())). Only thing to know is that there is a length limit of 8000 characters.

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