I'm using a generic system for reporting which takes data from a database view (SQL Server 2005). In this view I had to merge data from one-to-many relations in one row and used the solution described by priyanka.sarkar in this thread: Combine multiple results in a subquery into a single comma-separated value. The solution uses SQLXML for merging the data (subquery):
SELECT STUFF(
( SELECT ', ' + Name
FROM MyTable _in
WHERE _in.ID = _out.ID
FOR XML PATH('')), -- Output multiple rows as one xml type value,
-- without xml tags
1, 2, '') -- STUFF: Replace the comma at the beginning with empty string
FROM MyTable _out
GROUP BY ID -- Removes duplicates
That works perfectly (it's not even that heavy in performance) except my data now gets XML encoded (&?=>?&
?etc.) by SQLXML -I didn't want XML data after all, I just used this as a trick- and because of the generic system I can't code around this to clean it up so the encoded data goes straight to the report. I can't use stored procedures with the generic system so CURSOR-merging or COALESCE-ing is not an option here...
So what I'm looking for is a manner in T-SQL that lets me decode the XML again, or even better: avoids SQLXML from encoding it. Obviously I could write a stored function that does this, but I'd prefer a built-in, more safe manner...
Thanks for your help...
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