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Posted by Erland Sommarskog on 09/17/05 15:47
hharry (paulquigley@nyc.com) writes:
> CREATE TABLE [dbo].[TBL_NAME] (
> [NAME] [varchar] (50) COLLATE SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS NULL ,
> [STANDARD_NAME] [varchar] (50) COLLATE SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS
> NULL
> ) ON [PRIMARY]
> GO
>
> With values:
>
> insert into tbl_name
> values('DAN', 'DANIEL')
> insert into tbl_name
> values('DANNY', 'DANIEL')
> insert into tbl_name
> values('DANYY', 'DANIEL')
>
> Question is:
>
> I need want to construct a query which returns all names for a standard
> name plus the standard name itself.
> e.g.
> if name = 'DAN' then return 'DAN', 'DANNY', 'DANYY', 'DANIEL'
> ff name = 'DANIEL', then return 'DAN', 'DANNY', 'DANYY', 'DANIEL'
>...
If you add a row with (DANIEL, DANIEL), you can write a much simpler query:
insert into tbl_name
values('DAN', 'DANIEL')
insert into tbl_name
values('DANNY', 'DANIEL')
insert into tbl_name
values('DANYY', 'DANIEL')
insert into tbl_name
values('DANIEL', 'DANIEL')
go
DECLARE @name varchar(50)
SELECT @name = 'DANIEL'
SELECT name
FROM tbl_name t1
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT name, standard_name
FROM tbl_name t2
WHERE t2.standard_name = t1.standard_name
AND t2.name = @name)
go
If this change is not feasible or possible, you could write:
SELECT t1.name
FROM (SELECT name, standard_name
FROM tbl_name
UNION
SELECT standard_name, standard_name
FROM tbl_name) t1
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT name, standard_name
FROM (SELECT name, standard_name
FROM tbl_name
UNION
SELECT standard_name, standard_name
FROM tbl_name) t2
WHERE t2.standard_name = t1.standard_name
AND t2.name = @name)
But that's certainly a little more complex, and whether it's cleaner
your current query is a matter of taste.
--
Erland Sommarskog, SQL Server MVP, esquel@sommarskog.se
Books Online for SQL Server SP3 at
http://www.microsoft.com/sql/techinfo/productdoc/2000/books.asp
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