Question

Let's say I have the following table:

CustomerID ParentID Name
========== ======== ====
1          null     John
2          1        James
3          2        Jenna
4          3        Jennifer
5          3        Peter
6          5        Alice
7          5        Steve
8          1        Larry 

I want to retrieve in one query all the descendants of James (Jenna,Jennifer,Peter, Alice, Steve). Thanks, Pablo.

Was it helpful?

Solution

On SQL Server 2005 you can use CTEs (Common Table Expressions) :

with Hierachy(CustomerID, ParentID, Name, Level)
as
(
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name, 0 as Level
    from Customers c
    where c.CustomerID = 2 -- insert parameter here
    union all
    select c.CustomerID, c.ParentID, c.Name, ch.Level + 1
    from Customers c
    inner join Hierachy ch
    on c.ParentId = ch.CustomerID
)
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name
from Hierachy
where Level > 0

OTHER TIPS

For bottom up use mathieu's answer with a little modification:



with Hierachy(CustomerID, ParentID, Name, Level)
as
(
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name, 0 as Level
    from Customers c
    where c.CustomerID = 2 -- insert parameter here
    union all
    select c.CustomerID, c.ParentID, c.Name, ch.Level + 1
    from Customers c
    inner join Hierachy ch

    -- EDITED HERE --
    on ch.ParentId = c.CustomerID
    ----------------- 

)
select CustomerID, ParentID, Name
from Hierachy
where Level > 0


You can't do recursion in SQL without stored procedures. The way to solve this is using Nested Sets, they basically model a tree in SQL as a set.

Notice that this will require a change to the current data model or possibly figuring out how to create a view on the original model.

Postgresql example (using very few postgresql extensions, just SERIAL and ON COMMIT DROP, most RDBMSes will have similar functionality):

Setup:

CREATE TABLE objects(
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    name TEXT,
    lft INT,
    rgt INT
);

INSERT INTO objects(name, lft, rgt) VALUES('The root of the tree', 1, 2);

Adding a child:

START TRANSACTION;

-- postgresql doesn't support variables so we create a temporary table that 
-- gets deleted after the transaction has finished.

CREATE TEMP TABLE left_tmp(
    lft INT
) ON COMMIT DROP; -- not standard sql

-- store the left of the parent for later use
INSERT INTO left_tmp (lft) VALUES((SELECT lft FROM objects WHERE name = 'The parent of the newly inserted node'));

-- move all the children already in the set to the right
-- to make room for the new child
UPDATE objects SET rgt = rgt + 2 WHERE rgt > (SELECT lft FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1);
UPDATE objects SET lft = lft + 2 WHERE lft > (SELECT lft FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1);

-- insert the new child
INSERT INTO objects(name, lft, rgt) VALUES(
    'The name of the newly inserted node', 
    (SELECT lft + 1 FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1), 
    (SELECT lft + 2 FROM left_tmp LIMIT 1)
);

COMMIT;

Display a trail from bottom to top:

SELECT
    parent.id, parent.lft
FROM
    objects AS current_node
INNER JOIN
    objects AS parent
ON
    current_node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rgt
WHERE
    current_node.name = 'The name of the deepest child'
ORDER BY
    parent.lft;

Display the entire tree:

SELECT
    REPEAT('   ', CAST((COUNT(parent.id) - 1) AS INT)) || '- ' || current_node.name AS indented_name
FROM
    objects current_node
INNER JOIN
    objects parent
ON
    current_node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rgt
GROUP BY
    current_node.name,
    current_node.lft
ORDER BY
    current_node.lft;

Select everything down from a certain element of the tree:

SELECT
    current_node.name AS node_name
FROM
    objects current_node
INNER JOIN
    objects parent
ON
    current_node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rgt
AND
    parent.name = 'child'
GROUP BY
    current_node.name,
    current_node.lft
ORDER BY
    current_node.lft;

Unless I'm missing something, recursion isn't necessary...

SELECT d.NAME FROM Customers As d
INNER JOIN Customers As p ON p.CustomerID = d.ParentID
WHERE p.Name = 'James'
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top