4

How to know last row when iterating cursor on SQL Server?

I have tried with counter and @@CURSOR_ROWS and @@FETCH_STATUS, but it doesn't work well or I didn't use them in proper way.

EDIT:

Well, yeah, composing string with comma... , on the end of each loop. Of course, before return I can cut off the last character which will be , but I'm wondering is this only way?

However, there is a lot of situations, it may be good to know how to recognise the last row.

2
  • What will you use this information for? Is it possible to transform your problem such that you do something special for the first row rather than the last? (classic example - adding commas between elements. Change the logic to prepending commas to all but the first row rather than trying to append commas to all but the last row) Aug 23, 2016 at 7:28
  • @Damien_The_Unbeliever please see the edit
    – dllhell
    Aug 23, 2016 at 7:33

2 Answers 2

7

As suggested in the comments, putting commas between elements is far more easily realised by doing something special for the first row, rather than the last.1,2

Rather than

WHILE @@FETCH_STATUS=0
BEGIN
    SET @value = @value + @newelement + ','

    ...
END

And trying to work out how to treat the last row specially, it's far easier to do:

SET @first = 1
WHILE @@FETCH_STATUS=0
BEGIN
    IF @first = 1
        SET @first = 0
    ELSE
        SET @value = @value + ','

    SET @value = @value + @newelement

    ...
END

An alternative transformation, if you really do need to do something for the last row is to use intermediate variables and a non-standard cursor loop:

declare boris cursor for select top 10 name from sys.objects order by name

declare @name sysname
declare @nametemp sysname

open boris
fetch next from boris into @nametemp
while @@FETCH_STATUS=0
BEGIN
    set @name = @nametemp --Use SELECT if multiple variables to be assigned

    fetch next from boris into @nametemp

    if @@FETCH_STATUS!=0
    begin
        print 'and finally'
    end

    print @name
END

close boris
deallocate boris

Which prints (for me, in a nearly empty DB):

EventNotificationErrorsQueue
filestream_tombstone_2073058421
filetable_updates_2105058535
IsIt
QueryNotificationErrorsQueue
queue_messages_1977058079
queue_messages_2009058193
queue_messages_2041058307
ServiceBrokerQueue
and finally
sysallocunits

But I'd strongly recommend the first type of transformation instead.


1This isn't just a T-SQL thing either. In most programming languages, it's usually far easier if you can transform your problem from "treat the last iteration differently" into "treat the first iteration differently"

2And, of course, insert usual warnings about cursors being a last resort in SQL, use set-based approaches unless or until they're proved to be inadequate.

2
  • no doubt you are right, I'll do as you propose but what if I need to execute storproc before the last row for some reason?
    – dllhell
    Aug 23, 2016 at 7:44
  • @dllhell - I've given an alternative, but I'd recommend against it, if you possibly can find a transformation of the first type. Aug 23, 2016 at 7:53
3

You can also use the condition after the FETCH:

DECLARE @sqlStatement nvarchar(max) = '(';
DECLARE @column_name nvarchar(255);
DECLARE colums CURSOR FOR 
SELECT TOP 10 name FROM sys.all_columns 
OPEN colums
FETCH NEXT FROM colums INTO @column_name
WHILE @@FETCH_STATUS = 0
BEGIN 
    SET @sqlStatement = @sqlStatement 
                      + QUOTENAME(@column_name)                   
    FETCH NEXT FROM colums INTO @column_name
    SET @sqlStatement = @sqlStatement + CASE WHEN @@FETCH_STATUS != -1 THEN ',' ELSE ')' END 
                      + char(13)
END
CLOSE colums
DEALLOCATE colums
print @sqlStatement

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