Suppose I store employee data in a xml column in my log table. Sometimes data is also updated in the xml column from a stored procedure.

Here is the sample example

DECLARE @XML1 XML
DECLARE @XML2 XML

SET @XML1 = 
'<NewDataSet> 
<Employee>
<EmpID>1005</EmpID>
<Name> keith </Name>
<DOB>12/02/1981</DOB>
<DeptID>ACC001</DeptID>
<Salary>10,500</Salary>
</Employee>
</NewDataSet>'

SET @XML2 = 
'<NewDataSet> 
<Employee>
<EmpID>1006</EmpID>
<Name> keith </Name>
<DOB>05/02/1981</DOB>
<DeptID>ACC002</DeptID>
<Salary>10,900</Salary>
</Employee>
</NewDataSet>'

There is some difference in two the xml data which I need to show like old value & new value as a output of sql

Old Value             New Value
---------             ---------
1005                  1006
12/02/1981            05/02/1981
ACC001                ACC002
10,500                10,900

I just need to show the difference like above. So please guide me how to compare two xml data using XQuery and show the difference only in the above fashion in SQL Server. Please guide me with code snippet. thanks

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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted
;with XML1 as
(
  select T.N.value('local-name(.)', 'nvarchar(100)') as NodeName,
         T.N.value('.', 'nvarchar(100)') as Value
  from @XML1.nodes('/NewDataSet/Employee/*') as T(N)
),
XML2 as
(
  select T.N.value('local-name(.)', 'nvarchar(100)') as NodeName,
         T.N.value('.', 'nvarchar(100)') as Value
  from @XML2.nodes('/NewDataSet/Employee/*') as T(N)
)
select coalesce(XML1.NodeName, XML2.NodeName) as NodeName, 
       XML1.Value as Value1, 
       XML2.Value as Value2
from XML1
  full outer join XML2
    on XML1.NodeName = XML2.NodeName
where coalesce(XML1.Value, '') <> coalesce(XML2.Value, '')    

Result:

NodeName             Value1               Value2
-------------------- -------------------- --------------------
EmpID                1005                 1006
DOB                  12/02/1981           05/02/1981
DeptID               ACC001               ACC002
Salary               10,500               10,900
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it was great....thanks – Thomas Jan 7 at 16:45
1  
+1 excellent work - I kept studying around how to achieve this and just didn't see the forest for the trees! – marc_s Jan 7 at 16:55
what to change in ur code to show the data how marc_s data is showing but i dont want to hard code the field name like marc_s. can u plzz help. thanks – Thomas Jan 9 at 6:32
You need to use pivot and when you want a variable number of columns you need to do it dynamically. Have a look at dynamic pivot here. simple-talk.com/community/blogs/andras/archive/2007/09/14/… store away the result from this query in a table variable and then do the dynamic pivot stuff from the article on the table variable. – Mikael Eriksson Jan 9 at 7:00
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I don't have the exact output you wanted - but at least you get a good comparison of old and new values:

;WITH OldData AS
(
SELECT 
    @XML1.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/EmpID)[1]', 'int') AS 'EmpID',
    @XML1.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/Name)[1]', 'varchar(50)') AS 'Name',
    @XML1.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/DOB)[1]', 'datetime') AS 'DOB',
    @XML1.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/DeptID)[1]', 'varchar(50)') AS 'DeptID',
    @XML1.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/Salary)[1]', 'varchar(25)') AS 'Salary'
),
NewData AS
(
SELECT 
    @XML2.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/EmpID)[1]', 'int') AS 'EmpID',
    @XML2.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/Name)[1]', 'varchar(50)') AS 'Name',
    @XML2.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/DOB)[1]', 'datetime') AS 'DOB',
    @XML2.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/DeptID)[1]', 'varchar(50)') AS 'DeptID',
    @XML2.value('(/NewDataSet/Employee/Salary)[1]', 'varchar(25)') AS 'Salary'
)
SELECT
    'Old values', od.*
FROM OldData od
UNION
SELECT 'New values', nd.*
FROM NewData nd

Gives you an output of:

            EmpID  Name   DOB                       DeptID   Salary
Old values  1005   keith  1981-12-02 00:00:00.000   ACC001   10,500
New values  1006   keith  1981-05-02 00:00:00.000   ACC002   10,900

SQL Server is great for storing and manipulating data - but presentation like this should be done in a front-end application (like an ASP.NET application) - not in T-SQL....

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ur effort was good but u hard code the field name which i dont want. thanks – Thomas Jan 7 at 16:46
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