1

I have a table as MarketOutput that has 20 Columns

[Region] [LOB]  [GWP 2013]  [GWP 2014]  [LR 2013]   [LR 2014]
-------------------------------------------------------------
North  Workers  38902.50     37,972,404   89             82

I would like to dynamically change column to rows. Region and LOB are fixed columns, [GWP 2013], [GWP 2014], [LR 2013], [LR 2014] are dynamic columns.

For next year they will be [GWP 2015], [LR 2015]

I want to unpivot the column and split the [GWP 2014] as two column [GWP], [2014].

The output should be like

Region  [LOB]      [Metrics] [Year] [Value]
--------------------------------------------------
North   Workers    GWP       2013         38902.50 
North   Workers    GWP       2014    37,972,404
North   Workers    LR        2013            89
North   Workers    LR        2014            82

Can you please suggest how it can be done?

I am new to pivoting in SQL Server

I would also like to insert the output into a new table every time with dynamic list

2

1 Answer 1

7

You just need to split the columns after do the UNPIVOT something like this:

WITH Unpivoted 
AS
(
    SELECT region, lob, columns, value
    FROM Regions
    UNPIVOT
    (
       columns
       FOR value IN([GWP 2013] , [GWP 2014] ,
                    [LR 2013]  , [LR 2014] ,
                    [GWP 2015], [LR 2015])
    ) AS u
) 
SELECT 
  region, 
  lob,
  columns,
  CAST(CASE WHEN value LIKE 'GWP%' THEN REPLACE(value,'GWP ', '')
       WHEN value LIKE 'LR%' THEN REPLACE(value,'LR ', '')
  END AS INT) AS Year,
  CASE WHEN value LIKE 'GWP%' THEN 'GWP'
       WHEN value LIKE 'LR%' THEN 'LR'
  END AS Metrics
FROM Unpivoted;

And then of course you should do it dynamically to avoid listing the columns manually and do it dynamically:

DECLARE @cols AS NVARCHAR(MAX);
DECLARE @query AS NVARCHAR(MAX);

select @cols = STUFF((SELECT distinct ',' +
                        QUOTENAME(column_name)
                      FROM information_schema.columns
                      WHERE table_name = 'Regions'
                        AND COLUMN_NAME <> 'Region' 
                        AND COLUMN_NAME <> 'LOB'
                      FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE
                     ).value('.', 'NVARCHAR(MAX)') 
                        , 1, 1, '');


SELECT @query = 'WITH Unpivoted 
                AS
                (
                    SELECT region, lob, columns, value
                    FROM Regions
                    UNPIVOT
                    (
                       columns
                       FOR value IN('+ @cols + ')
                    ) AS u
                ) 
                SELECT 
                  region, 
                  lob,
                  columns,
                  CAST(CASE WHEN value LIKE ''GWP%'' THEN REPLACE(value,''GWP '', '''')
                       WHEN value LIKE ''LR%'' THEN REPLACE(value,''LR '', '''')
                  END AS INT) AS Year,
                  CASE WHEN value LIKE ''GWP%'' THEN ''GWP''
                       WHEN value LIKE ''LR%'' THEN ''LR''
                  END AS Metrics
                FROM Unpivoted';


EXECUTE(@query);

This should work fine assuming that:

  • All the columns [GWP 2013] , [GWP 2014] , [LR 2013] , [LR 2014] , [GWP 2015], [LR 2015], ... etc are in the same format (GWP or LR then space then the year, and
  • All of the columns are of the same data type int or decimal, if the data types are not the same you should cast all of them into one data type before doing the unpivot otherwise you will got an error.

  • SQL Fiddle Demo

This will give you:

| region |     lob |  columns | Year | Metrics |
|--------|---------|----------|------|---------|
|  North | Workers |  38902.5 | 2013 |     GWP |
|  North | Workers | 37972404 | 2014 |     GWP |
|  North | Workers |       70 | 2015 |     GWP |
|  North | Workers |       89 | 2013 |      LR |
|  North | Workers |       82 | 2014 |      LR |
|  North | Workers |       80 | 2015 |      LR |

Update:

I used FOR XML PATH('') .. to concatenate all the list of values in one string, it is a work around in SQL Server to do that. The value of @cols will be the string: [GWP 2013], [GWP 2014], ....

If your fields data type are different, you have to do the cast of all the columns that will be unpivoted in the anchor query before doing the UNPVOT like this:

SELECT @query = 'WITH Unpivoted 
                AS
                (
                    SELECT region, lob, columns, value
                    FROM 
                    (
                       SELECT 
                         region,
                         lob,
                         CAST([GWP 2013] AS DECIMAL(10,2)) AS [GWP 2013],
                         CAST([GWP 2014] AS DECIMAL(10,2)) AS [GWP 2014],
                         ... etc
                       FROM Regions
                    ) AS t
                    UNPIVOT
                    (
                       columns
                       FOR value IN('+ @cols + ')
                    ) AS u
                ) 
                SELECT 
                  region, 
                  lob,
                  columns,
                  CAST(CASE WHEN value LIKE ''GWP%'' THEN REPLACE(value,''GWP '', '''')
                       WHEN value LIKE ''LR%'' THEN REPLACE(value,''LR '', '''')
                  END AS INT) AS Year,
                  CASE WHEN value LIKE ''GWP%'' THEN ''GWP''
                       WHEN value LIKE ''LR%'' THEN ''LR''
                  END AS Metrics
                FROM Unpivoted';

If you found it hard to write the cast for all the columns manually, you can generate it dynamically and append it instead, for example:

DECLARE @colsCasted AS NVARCHAR(MAX);

select @colsCasted = STUFF((SELECT distinct ',' +
                        'CAST(' + QUOTENAME(column_name) + 'AS DECIMAL(10,2)) AS ' + QUOTENAME(column_name)
                      FROM information_schema.columns
                      WHERE table_name = 'Regions'
                        AND COLUMN_NAME <> 'Region' 
                        AND COLUMN_NAME <> 'LOB'
                      FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE
                     ).value('.', 'NVARCHAR(MAX)') 
                        , 1, 1, '');

Then in the dynamic query append that value to it:

SELECT @query = 'WITH Unpivoted 
                    AS
                    (
                        SELECT region, lob, columns, value
                        FROM 
                        (
                          SELECT region, lob,
                          ' + @colsCasted + '
                          FROM Regions
                        ) AS t
                        UNPIVOT
                        (
                           columns
                           FOR value IN('+ @cols + ')
                        ) AS u
                    ) 
                    SELECT 
                      region, 
                      lob,
                      columns,
                      CAST(CASE WHEN value LIKE ''GWP%'' THEN REPLACE(value,''GWP '', '''')
                           WHEN value LIKE ''LR%'' THEN REPLACE(value,''LR '', '''')
                      END AS INT) AS Year,
                      CASE WHEN value LIKE ''GWP%'' THEN ''GWP''
                           WHEN value LIKE ''LR%'' THEN ''LR''
                      END AS Metrics
                    FROM Unpivoted';


    EXECUTE(@query);
10
  • This works like charm. Can you please explain how xml_path works?
    – Mohit
    Oct 21, 2015 at 5:03
  • You also mentioned that i need to cast, as all my fields are not either int or decimal, some are nvarchar. This casting needs to be done in a separate dynamic Query? or would be part of @Query?
    – Mohit
    Oct 21, 2015 at 5:06
  • what does this mean FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE ).value('.', 'NVARCHAR(MAX)') , 1, 1, '');
    – Mohit
    Oct 21, 2015 at 5:20
  • @Mohit - I update my answer to clarify all these doubts, please see my update in the answer. Oct 21, 2015 at 8:47
  • 2
    Thank you Mahmoud for clarifying. Really appreciate the effort
    – Mohit
    Oct 21, 2015 at 8:52

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.