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I have a SQL table that is made up of two columns without column id the two columns is combining of equivalent parts of cars in which it is necessary to return in one column all possible relations giving an element of one column or another, for example the given value is 530:

 ColunaA    ColunaB 
 530          520
 530          510
 530          444
 444          222
 333          111

The end result has to be:

 Column X 
 530 
 520 
 510  
 444 
 222

I tried this SQL query:

WITH AreasCTE AS 
(
 SELECT colunaa, colunab FROM dbo.Tabela1 WHERE colunaa = '530' 
 UNION ALL 
 SELECT a.colunaa, a.colunab FROM dbo.Tabela1 a 
 INNER JOIN AreasCTE s ON a.colunaa = s.colunaa
) 
SELECT top 100 colunaa, colunab FROM AreasCTE

Thanks for the help!!

19
  • No ID column or similar?
    – jarlh
    Mar 7, 2018 at 15:19
  • Which dbms are you using?
    – jarlh
    Mar 7, 2018 at 15:19
  • Please make an minimal reproducible example with sample input in the shape of a line of "create table ..." and some lines of "insert ...".
    – Yunnosch
    Mar 7, 2018 at 15:20
  • Does not look like combinations, looks like a list of occuring entries.
    – Yunnosch
    Mar 7, 2018 at 15:21
  • Why has the desired output "530" twice but not three times and "444" only once and neither "333" nor "111"? Please explain more about the logic of the result.
    – Yunnosch
    Mar 7, 2018 at 15:21

1 Answer 1

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Try this, it's not perfect solution probably needs some performance tuning but should do the job.

    DECLARE @t1 TABLE
    (
        colunaA NVARCHAR(MAX) ,
        colunaB NVARCHAR(MAX)
    );

INSERT INTO @t1
VALUES ( 530, 520 ) ,
       ( 530, 510 ) ,
       ( 530, 444 ) ,
       ( 444, 222 ) ,
       ( 333, 111 );

SELECT *
FROM   @t1;

DECLARE @value NVARCHAR(MAX);
SET @value = 222;

DECLARE @filter TABLE
    (
        id NVARCHAR(MAX)
    );

INSERT INTO @filter
VALUES ( @value );

DECLARE @right_row_count INT;
DECLARE @left_row_count INT;

SET @left_row_count = 1;


WHILE @left_row_count > 0
      OR @right_row_count > 0
    BEGIN

        INSERT INTO @filter ( id )
                    SELECT DISTINCT t.colunaA
                    FROM   @t1 t
                           INNER JOIN @filter f ON t.colunaB = f.id
                    WHERE  t.colunaA NOT IN (   SELECT *
                                                FROM   @filter );
        SET @right_row_count = @@rowcount;

        INSERT INTO @filter ( id )
                    SELECT DISTINCT t.colunaB
                    FROM   @t1 t
                           INNER JOIN @filter f ON t.colunaA = f.id
                    WHERE  t.colunaB NOT IN (   SELECT *
                                                FROM   @filter );
        SET @left_row_count = @@rowcount;


    END;

SELECT   *
FROM     @filter
ORDER BY id DESC;
4
  • 1
    it works in the direction of searching only column A but how it works when i search 444
    – Titanium
    Mar 8, 2018 at 12:19
  • yes i delete the comment i figured it out...just a dummie question sorry. but the searching on both directions is needed
    – Titanium
    Mar 8, 2018 at 12:27
  • both directions added Mar 8, 2018 at 14:29
  • 1
    WORK LIKE A CHARM!! Thanks for the reply
    – Titanium
    Mar 8, 2018 at 15:13

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