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There is a column containing following e.g. abcd/ef/g/hij. Characters between the / are dynamic not fix. I want to split in a select query the content into 4 separate new columns.

The already answered question is different, I want to split the content in a string seperated by / into new columns.

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    will you always have 3 / in your string or number of column can also be dynamic?
    – ughai
    May 20, 2015 at 13:23
  • Can you give a sample data and expected output?
    – artm
    May 20, 2015 at 13:25
  • I will always have 3 /. So number of columns are fix May 20, 2015 at 13:27
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    I don't fully understand this. Are you sure you want columns and not rows? What rows of data will be allocated to the columns? Are you wanting the string split to create a temp / perm table and then insert into that? May 20, 2015 at 13:35
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    question is closed just as i completed an answer and the link only describe how to split a varchar. Not distribute it in columns May 20, 2015 at 14:00

3 Answers 3

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You can use REPLACE to replace '/' with '.'. Then use PARSENAME to get each separate part of the string:

CREATE TABLE #tmp (str VARCHAR(50))

INSERT INTO #tmp VALUES
('abcd/ef/g/hij'),
('1111111/222/33/4444')

SELECT PARSENAME(x.s, 4) AS [1], PARSENAME(x.s, 3) AS [2], 
       PARSENAME(x.s, 2) AS [3], PARSENAME(x.s, 1) AS [4]
FROM #tmp
CROSS APPLY (SELECT REPLACE(str, '/', '.')) AS x(s)

Output:

1       2   3   4
---------------------
abcd    ef  g   hij
1111111 222 33  4444
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  • interesting solution, although I wouldn't use it because it's not supposed to do what OP wants. It will not work for more than 4 parts and it also could return incorrect results for strings like [a]/[a]/[a]/[asd] May 20, 2015 at 13:44
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    @Roman The OP states: I will always have 3 /. (see comment), The only problem is if there are '.' in str column. But there is a work-around for this too (.i.e to replace '.' with a special not-existent character before replacing '/'s). May 20, 2015 at 13:46
  • what about [ symbols which will be removed by your solution? May 20, 2015 at 15:04
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    @RomanPekar Well, these symbols will be treated as delimiters by PARSENAME and will be thus left out of the returned string. This solution is probably the simplest but can be used only in case there are no '.', '[' or ']' in str column. May 20, 2015 at 18:13
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If you ask me, fastest ad-hoc method would be to turn your data into xml and use nodes() method:

declare @temp table (data nvarchar(max))

insert into @temp
select 'abcd/ef/g/hij' union all
select '1/2/3'

select t.data, n.c.value('.', 'nvarchar(max)')
from @temp as t
    outer apply (select cast('<t>' + replace(t.data, '/', '</t><t>') + '</t>' as xml) as data) as d
    outer apply d.data.nodes('t') as n(c)
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You need to find the position of the / characters using CHARINDEX and slice the string up that way. It will be a large expression, because to find the third slash, you need to use the 3rd parameter of CHARINDEX, passing the result of another CHARINDEX, which also has its 3rd parameter being used. Except for the last (fourth) fragment, you also need to use CHARINDEX to find and remove text after the next slash.

Something like this will extract the text after the third slash:

RIGHT(s, CHARINDEX('/', s, CHARINDEX('/', s, CHARINDEX('/', s)+1)+1)+1)

I leave the rest to you.

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