i've a query that is supposed to return the sum for "status"-duration entries. The duration is calculated by using datediff(n, datestamp, (subquery that returns the datestamp ending the current status, i.e. finds the next fitting "status change"-entry after the one locked at)
My Problem is that the following query returns a开发者_如何学Cn multi-part identifier error
- The INC table is giving me the "INCIDENT_NUMBER" i'm looking for wich is related to "NUMBER" in the other tables
- ACTM1 holds all DATESTAMP-Entries
- ACTA1 is related to ACTM1 via "THENUMBER" and it holds all the information about if an entry is an fitting status change or not
Code:
SELECT SUM(DATEDIFF(n, ACTM1.DATESTAMP, END_DATESTAMP_TABLE.END_DATESTAMP))
FROM INC LEFT OUTER JOIN
ACTM1 ON INC.INCIDENT_NUMBER = ACTM1.NUMBER LEFT OUTER JOIN
ACTA1 ON ACTM1.THENUMBER = ACTA1.THENUMBER LEFT OUTER JOIN
/**/
(SELECT ACTM1_1.NUMBER, ACTM1_1.DATESTAMP AS END_DATESTAMP
FROM ACTM1 AS ACTM1_1 LEFT OUTER JOIN
/**/
(SELECT ACTM1_1_1.NUMBER, MIN(ACTM1_1_1.THENUMBER) AS FOLLOWUP_THENUMBER
FROM ACTM1 AS ACTM1_1_1
WHERE (ACTM1_1_1.THENUMBER > /**/ ACTM1_1.THENUMBER)/*I think here lies the problem*/
AND (ACTM1_1_1.[TYPE] IN ('Open', 'Status Change', 'Resolved', 'Closed')))
AS FOLLOWUP_THENUMBER_TABLE
/**/
ON ACTM1_1.NUMBER = FOLLOWUP_THENUMBER_TABLE.NUMBER)
AS END_DATESTAMP_TABLE
/**/
ON ACTM1.NUMBER = END_DATESTAMP_TABLE.NUMBER
WHERE ...
I would be grateful for any helpful comment or hint you could give me on this,
PS
The left side join relation cannot reference the right side, so this is illegal:
SELECT ...
FROM A
JOIN (SELECT ...FROM ... WHERE ... = A.Field) AS B ON A.ID = B.ID;
Use the APPLY operator instead:
SELECT ...
FROM A
APPLY (SELECT ...FROM ... WHERE ... = A.Field AND ID = A.ID) AS B;
In your case would probably be like following:
SELECT SUM(DATEDIFF(n, ACTM1.DATESTAMP, END_DATESTAMP_TABLE.END_DATESTAMP))
FROM INC
LEFT OUTER JOIN ACTM1 ON INC.INCIDENT_NUMBER = ACTM1.NUMBER
LEFT OUTER JOIN ACTA1 ON ACTM1.THENUMBER = ACTA1.THENUMBER
LEFT OUTER JOIN (
SELECT ACTM1_1.NUMBER, ACTM1_1.DATESTAMP AS END_DATESTAMP
FROM ACTM1 AS ACTM1_1
OUTER APPLY (
SELECT ACTM1_1_1.NUMBER, /* MIN(ACTM1_1_1.THENUMBER) */ AS FOLLOWUP_THENUMBER
FROM ACTM1 AS ACTM1_1_1
WHERE (ACTM1_1_1.THENUMBER > ACTM1_1.THENUMBER)
AND (ACTM1_1.NUMBER = FOLLOWUP_THENUMBER_TABLE.NUMBER)
AND (ACTM1_1_1.[TYPE] IN ('Open', 'Status Change', 'Resolved', 'Closed'))
) AS FOLLOWUP_THENUMBER_TABLE
) AS END_DATESTAMP_TABLE ON ACTM1.NUMBER = END_DATESTAMP_TABLE.NUMBER
Obviously the MIN inside the inner query makes no sense though.
I would rewrite the query to not use subqueries at all:
SELECT
SUM(DATEDIFF(n, A1.datestamp, A2.datestamp))
FROM
INC AS I
INNER JOIN ACTM1 AS A1 ON
A1.number = INC.incident_number
INNER JOIN ACTM1 AS A2 ON
A2.number > A1.number AND
A2.type IN ('Open', 'Status Change', 'Resolved', 'Closed')
LEFT OUTER JOIN ACTM1 AS A3 ON
A3.number > A1.number AND
A3.type IN ('Open', 'Status Change', 'Resolved', 'Closed') AND
A3.number < A2.number
WHERE
A3.number IS NULL
I wasn't able to fully reverse engineer your statement. I don't know if you needed the left joins or not and I didn't see where ACTA1 was actually being used, so I left it out. As a result, you may need to tweak the above. The general idea though is to find a row with a greater number, which has the type that you need, but for which there is no other row (A3) with the right type and a number that falls in between the two numbers.
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