1
SELECT 
    SerialNumber AS 'Serial', 
    ChannelName AS 'Channel', 
    CAST(ReadingDate AS DATE) AS 'ReadingDate', 
    CAST(ReadingDate AS TIME(0)) AS 'ReadingTime',
    ChannelValue AS 'Value'
FROM 
    [Staging].[UriData]
WHERE 
    ChannelName IN (SELECT ChannelName FROM Staging.ActiveChannels)     
    AND Processed = 0   
ORDER BY 
    ReadingDate DESC, ReadingTime DESC

Output:

Serial  |  Channel  |  ReadingDate  |  ReadingTime  |  Value
--------+-----------+---------------+---------------+-------
2209         m1         2018-09-20      16:30:00       20497
2209         m10        2018-09-20      16:30:00       20497
2209         m11        2018-09-20      16:30:00       1
2209         m2         2018-09-20      16:30:00       1
2209         m3         2018-09-20      16:30:00       2447
2209         m4         2018-09-20      16:30:00       0
2209         m5         2018-09-20      16:30:00       6490
2209         m6         2018-09-20      16:30:00       0
2209         m7         2018-09-20      16:30:00       50
2209         m7         2018-09-20      16:15:00       50
2209         m6         2018-09-20      16:15:00       0
2209         m5         2018-09-20      16:15:00       6620
2209         m4         2018-09-20      16:15:00       0
2209         m3         2018-09-20      16:15:00       2440
2209         m2         2018-09-20      16:15:00       1
2296         m11        2018-09-20      16:15:00       1
2296         m10        2018-09-20      16:15:00       20490
1489         m1         2018-09-20      16:15:00       20490
1489         m1         2018-09-20      16:00:00       20483
1489         m10        2018-09-20      16:00:00       20483

Pivot the table to produce:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Serial  |  Channel  |  ReadingDate  |  00:15  |  00:30  |  00:45.....00:00   
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
2209         m1         2018-09-20       56        987      65         234  
2209         m2         2018-09-20      etc.
2209         m3         2018-09-20     
2209         m4         2018-09-20      
2209         m5         2018-09-20      
1489         m6         2018-09-20      
1489         m7         2018-09-20      
2209.... etc.

Somebody helped me in a previous question that was answered, but I really do not understand what they have written and found it very complex. I don't want to just copy someone's code, but understand how this is achieved. While I have done a stack of tutorials, this outcome I require does not seem to be covered, or I am misunderstanding the principles.

Previous question and answer

There may be several different serial numbers, different channel names and differing dates. But there will always be 96 values for the day greater than midnight up until midnight (2018-01-01 00:01 to 2018-01-02 00:00).

So the new columns are the reading time filled with the corresponding value, by date, serial and channel. The initial query makes sure that the channels sent back exist in a table of channel names.

What do I use, some say CTE, some say Pivot, some have said to use SSIS. I am really struggling with the concept of this.

Any help, pointers or advice will be appreciated so I can focus my knowledge into that area.

3
  • CTE (for Common Table Expression), is a way to write sub-queries (and make them more easier to read), or is a way to do recursive queries. In your previous example, the solution used recursive CTE. learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/queries/…
    – DanB
    Sep 20, 2018 at 18:45
  • They also used Ranking function learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/functions/… This is used to dynamically add rownumber, rank, ... This was used to order the result.
    – DanB
    Sep 20, 2018 at 18:47
  • They told they was used pivot. This is not "real" pivot. They build a dynamic query, specifying column names.
    – DanB
    Sep 20, 2018 at 18:49

1 Answer 1

1

The query used in @D-Shih answer is an "old style pivot" query. Before SQL 2008 there was no PIVOT construct so an alternative approach was used that employed GROUP BY. This is still a valid approach in later versions of SQL Server although it is more verbose.

His query generates the "final query" that is then executed to give you a result. In your case you don't actually need to use a dynamic query but as you will see the final query is quite large and typing it out by hand will be a long and error prone exercise.

The way to understand what a bunch of statements do is to run them one at a time and see what the result is.

I will use @D-Shih answer as an example.

Let's look at first CTE (Common Table Expression), which is also named CTE:

;WITH CTE AS (
    SELECT CAST('00:00' AS TIME) startDt, CAST('23:45' AS TIME) endDt
    UNION ALL 
    SELECT DATEADD(MINUTE, 15, startDt),endDt
    FROM CTE
    WHERE DATEADD(MINUTE, 15, startDt) <endDt
)

This is recursive Common Table Expression. You can read more about them here. To see what results the above statement produces you can simply add

SELECT * FROM CTE

right after it and run both statements to get:

startDt          endDt
---------------- ----------------
00:00:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000
00:15:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000
00:30:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000
00:45:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000
01:00:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000
...
23:30:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000

From the above results you can see that startDt column has a set of "times".

Next we look at TimeTable. Notice that TimeTable CTE references "CTE" expression before it, so to see results you need to run them both followed by select query as follows:

;WITH CTE AS (
    SELECT CAST('00:00' AS TIME) startDt, CAST('23:45' AS TIME) endDt
    UNION ALL 
    SELECT DATEADD(MINUTE, 15, startDt),endDt
    FROM CTE
    WHERE DATEADD(MINUTE, 15, startDt) <endDt
), TimeTable AS (
    select *,ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY startDt) rn 
    FROM (
       SELECT  startDt,endDt
       FROM CTE
       UNION ALL 
       SELECT CAST('23:45' AS TIME) startDt, CAST('23:45' AS TIME) endDt
    ) t1
)
SELECT * FROM TimeTable

You will get

startDt          endDt            rn
---------------- ---------------- --------------------
00:00:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000 1
00:15:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000 2
00:30:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000 3
00:45:00.0000000 23:45:00.0000000 4
...

Notice that rn (row number) column has been added. Notice that this column is a "sorting" column i.e. values in this column increase as startDt values increase.

Next you can run this query (note I have ommited CTE tables for brevity):

DECLARE @cols AS NVARCHAR(MAX),
        @query  AS NVARCHAR(MAX);

[CTE Expression goes here]

select @cols = CONCAT(@cols,'MAX(CASE WHEN '''+CAST(startDt AS VARCHAR(5))+''' = CAST(ReadingDate AS TIME) THEN ChannelValue ELSE 0 end) AS ',QUOTENAME(CAST(startDt AS VARCHAR(5))),', ')
from TimeTable
WHERE startDt <= endDt
ORDER BY rn 

SET @cols = left(@cols, len(@cols) - 1)

-- Print value of a single variable
SELECT CAST('<A><![CDATA[' + CAST(@cols as nvarchar(max)) + ']]></A>' AS xml)

The complicated CAST('<A><![CDATA[' + CAST(@cols as nvarchar(max)) + ']]></A>' AS xml) is needed to work around SSMS text output truncation problem (see here)

Finally you can run the full query at once except you need to replace exec(@query) with SELECT CAST('<A><![CDATA[' + CAST(@query as nvarchar(max)) + ']]></A>' AS xml) to see the final query (note the text is XML encoded i.e. < is replaced with &lt; etc.)

You can also achieve the same result using PIVOT construct. See my answer to your previous question.

Hope this helps.

3
  • This has been a huge help. I have used the Pivot method and it works, but for one problem. Rather than the value appearing at the end of the '2018-09-20 00:00' row, the query creates a new row for the value at '2018-09-21 00:00'. Rather than having one row with 96 values for '2018-09-20 00:00', there are two rows, one with 95 for '2018-09-20 00:00' and one field null and one row with 95 nulls and 1 value at the end for '2018-09-21 00:00' sqlfiddle.com/#!18/441a4/6/0 Sep 21, 2018 at 22:57
  • 1
    In your sample you have date and time columns as strings: [ReadingDate] varchar(10), [ReadingTime] varchar(8), which is not optimal.
    – Alex
    Sep 22, 2018 at 22:36
  • 1
    Use CONVERT( DATE, ReadingDate, 103 ), CONVERT( TIME, [ReadingTime]) to convert them to date and time respectively.
    – Alex
    Sep 22, 2018 at 22:44

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