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I have the following table:

id | parent_id | quantity
-------------------------
1  | null      | 5
2  | null      | 3
3  | 2         | 10
4  | 2         | 15
5  | 3         | 2
6  | 5         | 4
7  | 1         | 9

Now I need a stored procedure in mysql that calles itself recursivly and returns the computed quantity. For example the id 6 has 5 as a parent which as 3 as a parent which has 2 as a parent. So I need to compute 4 * 2 * 10 * 3 ( = 240) as a result.

I am fairly new to stored procedures and I won't use them very often in the future because I prefer having my business logic in my program code rather then in the database. But in this case I can't avoid it.

Maybe a mysql guru (that's you) can hack together a working statement in a couple of seconds.

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This question seems to be aiming for a similar solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/1085287/hierarchical-data-in-mysql. Basically, this is tricky in mysql! – Coding Kiwi Aug 9 '10 at 7:44
1  
Recursion in stored procedures is permitted but disabled by default. To enable recursion, set the max_sp_recursion_depth server system variable to a value greater than zero – Haim Evgi Aug 9 '10 at 7:46
The statement "WITH RECURSIVE TABLE() AS" is not recognized from mysql? – Novemberland Aug 9 '10 at 8:12

2 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

its work only in mysql version >= 5

the stored procedure declaration is this,

you can give it little improve , but this working :

DELIMITER $$

CREATE PROCEDURE calctotal(
   IN number INT,
   OUT total INT
)

BEGIN

   DECLARE parent_ID INT DEFAULT NULL ;
   DECLARE tmptotal INT DEFAULT 0;
   DECLARE tmptotal2 INT DEFAULT 0;

   SELECT parentid   FROM test   WHERE id = number INTO parent_ID;   
   SELECT quantity   FROM test   WHERE id = number INTO tmptotal;     

   IF parent_ID IS NULL
    THEN
    SET total = tmptotal;
   ELSE     
    CALL calctotal(parent_ID, tmptotal2);
    SET total = tmptotal2 * tmptotal;   
   END IF;

END$$

DELIMITER ;

the calling is like (its important to set this variable) :

SET @@GLOBAL.max_sp_recursion_depth = 255;
SET @@session.max_sp_recursion_depth = 255; 

CALL calctotal(6, @total);
SELECT @total;
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if its help , accept the answer :) – Haim Evgi Aug 9 '10 at 12:25
That looks pretty good. I implemented this like a function and I always get the error "Recursive stored functions and triggers are not allowed" but my addison-wesley "MySQL 5" book claims that recursions will work for functions, too. Any final thoughts??? – SchlaWiener Aug 9 '10 at 14:37
Stored functions cannot be recursive. its from the offfical site : dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/stored-routines-syntax.html – Haim Evgi Aug 9 '10 at 15:25
That's mean from the mysql team but I suppose they have their reasons for disallowing this. I hoped I could do SELECT id, computed_quantity(id) FROM table. Anyway, I was able to do this as a recursive procedure with your help but that required me some additional c# client side code to get the result I wanted. – SchlaWiener Aug 9 '10 at 17:33

Take a look at Managing Hierarchical Data in MySQL by Mike Hillyer.

It contains fully worked examples on dealing with hierarchical data.

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+1 for the link, very interesting. I know how to get the data that I want with self joins, but I want to have this as a Stored Procedure (Function) because I really need this a couple of times in one query which will greatly reduce the redability if I reuse my code all over again. – SchlaWiener Aug 9 '10 at 11:09
You need to read further on because the article is not really about self joins but about nested sets which is a completely different thing. – bradgonesurfing Aug 9 '10 at 11:29

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