Oracle Tips by Burleson Consulting
There are many ways to use Oracle to pivot column data for display on a single row:
0 - Download SQL into Excel spreadsheet pivot table
Excel spreadsheets are a great way to pivot and analyze Oracle data, and tools like Excel-DB provide a fast API for downloading Oracle data into spreadsheets. Using excel pivot tables with Oracle data is a fast, easy way to use Oracle business intelligence without buying expensive OLAP solutions (Hyperion, Oracle BI Suite). Here is an example.
1 - Write a PL/SQL function
You can write a PL/SQL function to display multiple rows values on a single line. Martin Chadderton has written a Pl/SQL function called "stragg" that you can define to display multiple SQL rows on one single line.
This article by Younes Naguib describes how to display multiple values from a single column in a single output row. In his example, he displays multiple values of the last name column on a single row. Note his use of the sys_connect_by_path and over operators:
select
deptno,
substr(SYS_CONNECT_BY_PATH(lname, ','),2) name_list
from
(
select
lname,
deptno,
count(*) OVER ( partition by deptno ) cnt,
ROW_NUMBER () OVER ( partition by deptno order by lname) seq
from
igribun.emp
where
deptno is not null)
where
seq=cnt
start with
seq=1
connect by prior
seq+1=seq
and prior
deptno=deptno;
DEPTNO NAME_LIST
1 Komers,Mokrel,Stenko
2 Hung,Tong
3 Hamer
4 Mansur
3 - Cross join
Matt contributed this handy SQL techniques to pivot one row of several columns into a single column with several row, using the Oracle cross join syntax. Matt notes that the Cross join "has other uses in conjunction with a WHERE clause to create triangular result sets for rolling totals etc (though thanks to analytic functions those things are very nice and easy)".
SELECT
ite,
case
when ite = 'item1' then item1
when ite = 'item2' then item2
when ite = 'item3' then item3
end as val
FROM
(
SELECT
pivoter.ite,
item1,
item2,
item3
FROM
someTable
CROSS JOIN
(
select 'item1' as ite from dual
UNION ALL
select 'item2' as ite from dual
UNION ALL
select 'item3' as ite from dual
)pivoter
)
4 - Oracle analytic Lag-Over Function
Analytic functions have a pronounced performance improvement since they avoid an expensive self-join and only make one full-table scan to get the results. This site shows an example of using the Oracle LAG function to display multiple rows on a single column:
Matt contributed this handy SQL techniques to pivot one row of several columns into a single column with several row, using the Oracle cross join syntax. Matt notes that the Cross join "has other uses in conjunction with a WHERE clause to create triangular result sets for rolling totals etc (though thanks to analytic functions those things are very nice and easy)".
Also see how to display Oracle SQL output rows on one single line.
SELECT
ite,
case
when ite = 'item1' then item1
when ite = 'item2' then item2
when ite = 'item3' then item3
end as val
FROM
(
SELECT
pivoter.ite,
item1,
item2,
item3
FROM
someTable
CROSS JOIN
(
select 'item1' as ite from dual
UNION ALL
select 'item2' as ite from dual
UNION ALL
select 'item3' as ite from dual
)pivoter
附录:
Oracle Tips by Burleson Consulting
Question: How to I get my SQL output rows to display on one line? select ename from emp;
Smith Jones Baker
I want the SQL output on one line, like this: select ename from emp;
Smith, Jones, Baker How do I get multiple rows onto one line of output?
Answer: I have complete notes and samples of displaying multiple columns on a single row. You can also use the undocumented SQL wm_concat function. You can displaying multiple columns per row with sys_connect_by_path, or you can write a PL/SQL function to display multiple rows values on a single line.
Also look at using Oracle analytics (the LAG and OVER functions) to display data in a single row of output.
Martin Chadderton has written a Pl/SQL function called "stragg" that you can define to display multiple SQL rows on one single line. Once defined, you embed the function within your SQL to display your output on a single line:
select stragg(ename) from emp;
Smith, Jones, Baker
Note that sorting is tricky, and even though the output displays on a single line, the "order by" does not sort the rows on the one line:
select stragg(ename) from emp order by ename;The in-line view ensures that the SQL output appears sorted on one line of output:
Smith, Jones, Baker
select stragg(ename)
from
(select stragg(ename) from emp order by ename);
Baker, Jones, Smith