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I have a table called SourceTable, in that I have 4 fields. Properties_title field it has got 3 values (AAA,BBB,CCC) but can also have more. Depending on each of them, NumericValue field and Property_item_title field has a value.According to the table in the below, if Properties_title be AAA or CCC so Property_item_title it has value and if Properties_title be BBB so NumericValue it has value. Now I want pivot this to make just one row for each W_ID like Result Table.

SourceTable:

+--------+------------------+---------------+---------------------+
|  W_ID  | Properties_title | NumericValue  | Property_item_title |
+--------+------------------+---------------+---------------------+
| 102859 |     AAA          | null          |  Useless            |
| 102859 |     BBB          | 30000         |  null               |
| 102859 |     CCC          | null          |  Repair             |
| 92527  |     AAA          | null          |  Use                |
| 92527  |     BBB          | 3250          |  null               |
+--------+------------------+---------------+---------------------+

Result Table:

+-------+-----------+---------+---------+
|  W_id |   AAA     |  BBB    | CCC     |
+-------+-----------+---------+-------- +
|102859 |  Useless  | 30000   |  Repair |
|92527  |  Use      | 3250    |  null   |
|...    |    ...    | ...     |  ...    |
+-------+-----------+---------+---------+

the column names has to be dynamic

My Code:

CREATE TABLE dbo.SourceTable (W_ID int NOT NULL,
                            Properties_title varchar(3) NOT NULL,
                            NumericValue int NULL,
                            Property_item_title varchar(100) NULL);

INSERT INTO dbo.SourceTable
VALUES (102859,'AAA',NULL,'Useless'),
       (102859,'BBB',30000,NULL),
       (102859,'CCC',NULL,'Repair'),
       (92527,'AAA',NULL,'Use'),
       (92527,'BBB',3250,NULL);

SELECT *
FROM dbo.SourceTable;

Here is a db<>fiddle.

Thank you for your help.

7
  • 1
    Does this answer your question? SQL Server dynamic PIVOT query? Dec 11, 2019 at 13:30
  • @panagiotis-kanavos not exactly but it's so close. Dec 11, 2019 at 13:34
  • Why doesn't it, @JavedAbedi ? I see no obvious reason why it does not.
    – Thom A
    Dec 11, 2019 at 13:36
  • @larnu Because I have two filed with value and the code should recognize which value is for which column. Dec 11, 2019 at 13:38
  • That statement makes no sense. That suggested duplicate, to me, looks like it would work with an ISNULL.
    – Thom A
    Dec 11, 2019 at 13:42

1 Answer 1

2

To pivot over a fixed list of columns, you can do conditional aggregation:

select 
    w_id,
    max(case when properties_title = 'AAA' then property_item_title end) aaa,
    max(case when properties_title = 'BBB' then numeric_value end) bbb,
    max(case when properties_title = 'CCC' then property_item_title end) ccc
from sourcetable
group by w_id
9
  • 1
    Whoever downvoted, PIVOT doesn't require less code than conditional aggregation, nor is it better or faster in any way Dec 11, 2019 at 13:12
  • 1
    You have hardcoded column headers. Assuming OP has posted sample data, this query will not work when there is a fourth value say, "DDD" Dec 11, 2019 at 13:13
  • @PratikBhavsar: indeeed, this is why I mentioned that this pivots over a fixed list of columns (PIVOT has the same limitation). OP did not state that column names had to be dynamic. And for this to be dynamic, we would need dynamic SQL, which seems beyond the scope of the question.
    – GMB
    Dec 11, 2019 at 13:15
  • 1
    @PratikBhavsar that's what PIVOT does too. There's no way to use PIVOT on a query without knowing the column names in advance. In fact, there's no way to write any query without knowing the columns in advance. * is just a shortcut returning all column names Dec 11, 2019 at 13:18
  • @gmb exactly my friend, the column names had to be dynamic Dec 11, 2019 at 13:20

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