问题
Given that I have this resultset structure (superfluous fields have been stripped)
Id | ParentId | Name | Depth
----------------------------
is it possible to have the records returned in tree order i.e. Parent
then Children
, if a Child
is a Parent
, then their Children
, if not then Sibling
, etc? For example,
Id | ParentId | Name | Depth
----------------------------
1 NULL Major 1
2 1 Minor 2
3 1 Minor 2
4 3 Build 3
5 3 Build 3
6 1 Minor 2
/* etc, etc */
The only way that I can think of doing this would be to follow this article -
Improve hierarchy performance using nested sets
and include [LeftExtent]
and [RightExtent]
fields against each record. Now the SQL in the article works fine when Ids
are unique, but in this particular tree structure, a record with the same Id
can appear in different places within the tree (the ParentId
field is different, obviously). I think the problem is in this SQL from the article -
INSERT INTO @tmpStack
(
EmployeeID,
LeftExtent
)
SELECT TOP 1 EmployeeID, @counter
FROM Employee
WHERE ISNULL(ParentID, 0) = ISNULL(@parentid,0)
/* If the Id has already been added then record is not given [LeftExtent] or [RightExtent] values. */
AND EmployeeID NOT IN (SELECT EmployeeID FROM @tmpStack)
How can this be altered to allow records with duplicate Ids
to be given [LeftExtent] and [RightExtent] values, or I am completely missing an easier way to return the resultset in the order that I require?
回答1:
Here's one that does the trick for me:
@ParentID is just a starting point in the hierarchy, but you can pass in 0 (but I think you're using null as the base ID, so you'll get the idea)
The key to ordered sorting is with the sort key that's built up.
WITH RoleHierarchy (RoleID, [Role], [Description], ParentID, Editable, HierarchyLevel, SortKey) AS
(
-- Base
SELECT
RoleID,
[Role],
[Description],
ParentID,
Editable,
0 as HierarchyLevel,
CAST(RoleID AS VARBINARY(300))
FROM
dbo.Roles
WHERE
RoleID = @ParentID
UNION ALL
-- Recursive
SELECT
e.RoleID,
e.[Role],
e.[Description],
e.ParentID,
e.Editable,
th.HierarchyLevel + 1 AS HierarchyLevel,
CAST (th.SortKey + CAST (e.[Role] AS VARBINARY(100)) + CAST (e.[RoleID] AS VARBINARY(100)) AS VARBINARY(300))
FROM
Roles e
INNER JOIN RoleHierarchy th ON e.ParentID = th.RoleID
WHERE
e.RoleID != 0
)
SELECT
RoleID,
ParentID,
[Role],
[Description],
Editable,
HierarchyLevel
FROM
RoleHierarchy
WHERE
RoleID != @ParentID
ORDER BY
SortKey
回答2:
You should have a look at recursive common table expressions in SQL Server 2005:
- http://www.4guysfromrolla.com/webtech/071906-1.shtml
- http://www.sqlservercentral.com/articles/Development/recursivequeriesinsqlserver2005/1760/
In your case, this would be something like:
WITH EmployeeCTE AS
(
-- get the anchor
SELECT ID, ParentID, Name, 0 as 'Depth'
FROM Employee WHERE ParentID IS NULL
-- recursively union lower levels
UNION ALL
SELECT e.ID, e.ParentID, e.Name, e.Depth+1
FROM Employee e
INNER JOIN EmployeeCTE ON e.ParentID = EmployeeCTE.ID
)
SELECT * FROM EmployeeCTE
This should give you a nice query result set with the data you're looking for. Or am I missing something?
Marc
回答3:
If you used materialized path or HIERARCHYID, you life would be much easier...
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1124677/sql-server-tree-hierarchy-and-nested-sets-with-duplicate-record-ids