Question

Looking for a query in Informix's SQL that will simulate MySQL's group_concat function.

What MySQL's group_concat does is it creates an enumeration of all members in the group.

So with the data as follows:

orderid:itemName:price
      1:Paper   :10
      1:Pen     :5
      2:Sugar   :15

and the following query:

select group_concat(itemName), sum(price)
from order_details
group by orderid

would produce:

items    :price
Paper,Pen:15
Sugar    :15

What would be most efficient way to achieve this in Informix? Would we definitely have to use a stored procedure?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You would have to define a user-defined aggregate to do this. That has four parts - four functions (search for CREATE AGGREGATE in the IDS 12.10 Info Centre):

  1. Initializer (INIT)
  2. Iterator (ITER)
  3. Combine (COMBINE)
  4. Finalizer (FINAL)

That's the official terminology in capitals, and it is moderately intuitive. Think of calculating an average.

  1. Initializer: set sum = 0; N = 0
  2. Iterator: set sum += x; N++
  3. Combiner: set sum = sum1 + sum2; set N = N1 + N2
  4. Finalizer: result = sum / N -- with N=0 (zero-divide) checks

The combiner is used to combine intermediate results from parallel execution; each parallel execution starts with the iterator and generates intermediate results. When the parallel execution completes, the separate sets of values are combined with the combiner.

You can write analogous code in IDS - using stored procedures or C or Java UDRs.

See the SO question Show a one to many relationship as 2 columns — 1 unique row (ID & comma separated list) for a string-based GROUP_CONCAT() function implemented in Informix.

OTHER TIPS

There is certainly no built-in function in Informix to do this. Does any other mainstream RDBMS have such a bizarre aggregate function? Ordering by a column not selected in a query is a bit dubious, but grouping? That's a new one on me.

You would have to write a stored procedure or UDR to generate such a dataset. To be honest, I wouldn't attempt this in the database. It looks like a task best suited to the consumer of this output (ie the application/webapp/report-writer etc).

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