for a simple data structure such as so:
ID parentID Text Price
1 Root
2 1 Flowers
3 1 Electro
4 2 Rose 10
5 2 Violet 5
6 4 Red Rose 12
7 3 Television 100
8 3 Radio 70
9 8 Webradio 90
For reference, the hierarchy tree looks like this:
ID Text Price
1 Root
|2 Flowers
|-4 Rose 10
| |-6 Red Rose 12
|-5 Violet 5
|3 Electro
|-7 Television 100
|-8 Radio 70
|-9 Webradio 90
I'd like to count the number of children per level. So I would get a new column "NoOfChildren" like so:
ID parentID Text Price NoOfChildren
1 Root 8
2 1 Flowers 3
3 1 Electro 3
4 2 Rose 10 1
5 2 Violet 5 0
6 4 Red Rose 12 0
7 3 Television 100 0
8 3 Radio 70 1
9 8 Webradio 90 0
I read a few things about hierarchical data, but I somehow get stuck on the multiple inner joins on the parentIDs. Maybe someone could help me out here.
Using a CTE would get you what you want.
COUNT
the items for each root.JOIN
these again with your original table to produce the results.Test Data
DECLARE @Data TABLE (
ID INTEGER PRIMARY KEY
, ParentID INTEGER
, Text VARCHAR(32)
, Price INTEGER
)
INSERT INTO @Data
SELECT 1, Null, 'Root', NULL
UNION ALL SELECT 2, 1, 'Flowers', NULL
UNION ALL SELECT 3, 1, 'Electro', NULL
UNION ALL SELECT 4, 2, 'Rose', 10
UNION ALL SELECT 5, 2, 'Violet', 5
UNION ALL SELECT 6, 4, 'Red Rose', 12
UNION ALL SELECT 7, 3, 'Television', 100
UNION ALL SELECT 8, 3, 'Radio', 70
UNION ALL SELECT 9, 8, 'Webradio', 90
SQL Statement
;WITH ChildrenCTE AS (
SELECT RootID = ID, ID
FROM @Data
UNION ALL
SELECT cte.RootID, d.ID
FROM ChildrenCTE cte
INNER JOIN @Data d ON d.ParentID = cte.ID
)
SELECT d.ID, d.ParentID, d.Text, d.Price, cnt.Children
FROM @Data d
INNER JOIN (
SELECT ID = RootID, Children = COUNT(*) - 1
FROM ChildrenCTE
GROUP BY RootID
) cnt ON cnt.ID = d.ID