I am using a CTE to recurse data I have stored in a recursive table. The trouble is I am trying to figure out how I can use "FOR XML" to build the desired xml output. I have a Table of Contents table I am recursing and I want to be able to use that data to generate the XML.
Here is an example of what the data is simliar to:
ID|TOC_ID|TOC_SECTION|TOC_DESCRIPTON|PARENT_ID
1|I|Chapter|My Test Chapter|-1
2|A|Section|My Test Section|1
3|1|SubSection|My SubSection|2
I want to be able to spit out the data like so:
XML Attributes: ID = Appended values from the TOC_ID field value = value from TOC_Section field
<FilterData>
<Filter id="I" value="Chapter">
<Description>My Test Chapter</Description>
<Filter id="I_A" value="Section">
<Description>My Te开发者_运维百科st Section</Description>
<Filter id="I_A_1" value="SubSection">
<Description>My Test SubSection</Description>
</Filter>
</Filter>
</Filter>
</FilterData>
Not sure how I can take the CTE data and produce a similar format to the above. When the data is in separate tables it isn't too difficult to build this type of output.
As always appreciate the input.
Thanks,
S
You may get some mileage from Recursive Hierarchies to XML in Christian Wade's blog - it all looks mighty painful to me!
Check this out Will (Not sure you are still following)....this does have a 32 level max, but that should still work fine for my stuff...can't see going deeper than that. Found this on another forum:
CREATE TABLE tree ( id INT, name VARCHAR(5), parent_id INT )
GO
INSERT INTO tree VALUES ( 1, 'N1', NULL )
INSERT INTO tree VALUES ( 3, 'N4', 1 )
INSERT INTO tree VALUES ( 4, 'N10', 3 )
INSERT INTO tree VALUES ( 5, 'N7', 3 )
GO
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.treeList(@parent_id int)
RETURNS XML
WITH RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT
BEGIN RETURN
(SELECT id as "@id", name as "@name",
CASE WHEN parent_id=@parent_id
THEN dbo.treeList(id)
END
FROM dbo.tree WHERE parent_id=@parent_id
FOR XML PATH('tree'), TYPE)
END
GO
SELECT id AS "@id", name AS "@name",
CASE WHEN id=1
THEN dbo.treeList(id)
END
FROM tree
WHERE id=1
FOR XML PATH('tree'), TYPE
Now isn't that nice and simple?
Customised from the great example over on http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms345137.aspx
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