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I have a table that looks like

ID  Layout
1   hello,world,welcome,to,tsql
2   welcome,to,stackoverflow

The desired output should be

Id  Splitdata
1   hello
1   world
1   welcome
1   to
1   tsql
2   welcome
2   to
2   stackoverflow

I have done this by the below query

Declare @t TABLE(
    ID  INT IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,
    Layout VARCHAR(MAX)
)
INSERT INTO @t(Layout)
SELECT 'hello,world,welcome,to,tsql' union all
SELECT 'welcome,to,stackoverflow'
--SELECT * FROM @t
;With cte AS(
select F1.id
 ,O.splitdata 
 from
 (
 select *,
 cast('<X>'+replace(F.Layout,',','</X><X>')+'</X>' as XML) as xmlfilter
 from @t F
 )F1
 cross apply
 ( 
 select fdata.D.value('.','varchar(MAX)') as splitdata 
 from f1.xmlfilter.nodes('X') as fdata(D)) O
 )

 select * from cte

But performance wise it is very bad. I am looking for a more efficient query but using CTE only.

Please help

Thanks

share|improve this question
@Joel while I agree with you there are sometimes good reasons for knowing how to do this efficiently. Specifically scrubbing bad data coming from an integrated system where you must run the routine as a job on a regular cycle. I think the answer will be instructive and helpful to others. – NullRef Jun 17 '11 at 5:28
@NullRef - Agree, and my comment has some hyperbole in it. That's why it's a comment, and not an answer. But I also think it's important to have that notice well-placed and well-voted for the unwary. – Joel Coehoorn Jun 17 '11 at 5:38
@Joel I can't argue with that. I also can't argue with CSV=666! – NullRef Jun 17 '11 at 5:44
How does using a CTE make T-SQL any better at string parsing? – Yuck Jun 17 '11 at 12:45

3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

You seem dead set on using a CTE, so try this:

DECLARE @YourTable table (RowID int, Layout varchar(200))
INSERT @YourTable VALUES (1,'hello,world,welcome,to,tsql')
INSERT @YourTable VALUES (2,'welcome,to,stackoverflow')

;WITH SplitSting AS
(
    SELECT
        RowID,LEFT(Layout,CHARINDEX(',',Layout)-1) AS Part
            ,RIGHT(Layout,LEN(Layout)-CHARINDEX(',',Layout)) AS Remainder
        FROM @YourTable
        WHERE Layout IS NOT NULL AND CHARINDEX(',',Layout)>0
    UNION ALL
    SELECT
        RowID,LEFT(Remainder,CHARINDEX(',',Remainder)-1)
            ,RIGHT(Remainder,LEN(Remainder)-CHARINDEX(',',Remainder))
        FROM SplitSting
        WHERE Remainder IS NOT NULL AND CHARINDEX(',',Remainder)>0
    UNION ALL
    SELECT
        RowID,Remainder,null
        FROM SplitSting
        WHERE Remainder IS NOT NULL AND CHARINDEX(',',Remainder)=0
)
SELECT * FROM SplitSting ORDER BY RowID

OUTPUT:

RowID       Part                   
----------- -----------------------
1           hello                  
1           world                  
1           welcome                
1           to                     
1           tsql                   
2           welcome                
2           to                     
2           stackoverflow          

(8 row(s) affected)

here is an excellent atricle on splitting strings in SQL Server: "Arrays and Lists in SQL Server 2005 and Beyond, When Table Value Parameters Do Not Cut it" by Erland Sommarskog

EDIT here's another version (but you need a numbers table) returns same results as above:

;WITH SplitValues AS
(
    SELECT
        RowID,ListValue
        FROM (SELECT
                  RowID, LTRIM(RTRIM(SUBSTRING(List2, number+1, CHARINDEX(',', List2, number+1)-number - 1))) AS ListValue
                  FROM (
                           SELECT RowID, ',' + Layout + ',' AS List2
                           FROM @YourTable
                       ) AS dt
                      INNER JOIN Numbers n ON n.Number < LEN(dt.List2)
                  WHERE SUBSTRING(List2, number, 1) = ','
             ) dt2
        WHERE ListValue IS NOT NULL AND ListValue!=''
)
SELECT * FROM SplitValues

see here for a numbers table: What is the best way to create and populate a numbers table?

share|improve this answer

CTE only means no UDF? :(

I would consider using something like this Split Function which returns a TABLE value. Example of usage included in link. I imagine it would be a good bit faster than the XML shenanigans in the post. As far as design ... entirely agree with others that this non-normalized data is icky.

Happy SQL'ing (I think TVF were since SQL Server 2005, but I could be wrong...)

share|improve this answer

Try the proc in this post where they use recursion to split. I think you can adapt it. This uses a CTE.

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