I have a column called body
, which contains body content for our CMS. The data looks like:
...{cloak:id=1.1.1}...{cloak}...{cloak:id=1.1.2}...{cloak}...{cloak:id=1.1.3}...{cloak}...
A moderately tweaked for readability example:
## h5. A formal process for approving and testing all external network connections and changes to the firewall and router configurations?
{toggle-cloak:id=1.1.1}{tree-plus-icon} *Compliance:* {color:red}{*}Partial{*}{color} (?)
{cloak:id=1.1.1} || Date: | 2010-03-15 || || Owner: | Brian || || Researched by: | || || Narrative: | Jira tickets are normally used to approve and track network changes\\ || || Artifacts: | Jira.bccampus.ca\\ || || Recommendation: | Need to update policy that no Jira = no change\\ || || Proposed Remedy(ies): | || || Approved Remedy(ies): | || || Date: | || || Reviewed by: | || || Remarks/comments: | ||
{cloak}## h5. Current n开发者_如何学编程etwork diagrams with all connections to cardholder data, including any wireless networks?
{toggle-cloak:id=1.1.2}{tree-plus-icon} *Compliance:* {color:red}{*}TBD{*}{color} (?)
{cloak:id=1.1.2}
I'd like to get the cloak values out in the following format:
requirement_num
-----------------
1.1.1
1.1.2
1.1.3
I'm looking at using UNIONs - does anyone have a better recommendation?
Forgot to mention:
- I can't use regex, because CLR isn't enabled on the database.
- The numbers aren't sequencial. The current record jumps from 1.1.6 to 1.2.1
- I can guarantee that there will be a pair for each requirement number -
{toggle-cloak:id=x.y.z}
and{cloak:id=x.y.z}
. I'm interested in what is between the{cloak:id=x.y.z}
and{cloak}
tags.
I'd probably use a function for this. Something like:
create function [dbo].[getCloaks]
(
@String varchar(8000)
)
returns @tbl table (s varchar(1000))
as
begin
declare @i int, @j int, @k int
select @i = 1
while charindex('{cloak:id=', @String, @i) > 0
begin
select @j = charindex('{cloak:id=', @String, @i)
select @k = charindex('}', @String, @j)
insert @tbl select substring(@String, @j + 10, @k - @j - 10)
select @i = @k + 1
end
return
end
Here's a recursive CTE version that will hopefully be a little faster than an iterative UDF:
DECLARE @Data nvarchar(1000)
SET @Data = N'...{cloak:id=1.1.1}...{cloak}...{cloak:id=1.1.2}...{cloak}...' +
N'{cloak:id=1.1.3}...{cloak}...'
;WITH Cloak_CTE AS
(
SELECT
CAST(NULL AS nvarchar(50)) AS requirement_num,
CHARINDEX('{cloak:id=', @Data) AS start_index,
CHARINDEX('}', @Data, CHARINDEX('{cloak:id=', @Data)) AS end_index
UNION ALL
SELECT
CAST(SUBSTRING(@Data, start_index + 10,
end_index - start_index - 10) AS nvarchar(50)),
CHARINDEX('{cloak:id=', @Data, end_index + 1),
CHARINDEX('}', @Data, CHARINDEX('{cloak:id=', @Data, end_index + 1))
FROM Cloak_CTE
WHERE start_index > 0
)
SELECT requirement_num
FROM Cloak_CTE
WHERE requirement_num IS NOT NULL
Should be relatively straightforward to adjust for multiple rows or different patterns, or put this into an inline UDF.
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