Você pode fazer isso com o
PIVOT dinâmico e o ROW_NUMBER() função:DECLARE @cols AS VARCHAR(1000),
@query AS VARCHAR(8000)
SELECT @cols = STUFF((SELECT ',' + QUOTENAME(Name)
FROM (SELECT DISTINCT Name
FROM #test
)sub
ORDER BY Name
FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE).value('.', 'VARCHAR(MAX)')
,1,1,'')
PRINT @cols
SET @query = '
WITH cte AS (SELECT DISTINCT *
FROM #test)
,cte2 AS (SELECT *,ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY Name ORDER BY Apt)RowRank
FROM cte)
SELECT *
FROM cte2
PIVOT (max(Apt) for Name in ('example@sqldat.com+')) p
'
EXEC (@query)
SQL Fiddle - Lista distinta, ordem específica
Edit:Se você não quiser que a lista seja distinta, elimine o primeiro cte acima, e se você quiser manter a ordenação arbitrária, altere o
ORDER BY para (SELECT 1) :DECLARE @cols AS VARCHAR(1000),
@query AS VARCHAR(8000)
SELECT @cols = STUFF((SELECT ',' + QUOTENAME(Name)
FROM (SELECT DISTINCT Name
FROM #test
)sub
ORDER BY Name
FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE).value('.', 'VARCHAR(MAX)')
,1,1,'')
PRINT @cols
SET @query = '
WITH cte AS (SELECT *,ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY Name ORDER BY (SELECT 1))RowRank
FROM #test)
SELECT *
FROM cte
PIVOT (max(Apt) for Name in ('example@sqldat.com+')) p
'
EXEC (@query)
SQL Fiddle - Lista completa, ordem arbitrária
E, finalmente, se você não quiser o
RowRank campo em seus resultados, apenas reutilize o @cols variável em seu SELECT :SET @query = '
WITH cte AS (SELECT *,ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY Name ORDER BY (SELECT 1))RowRank
FROM #test)
SELECT 'example@sqldat.com+'
FROM cte
PIVOT (max(Apt) for Name in ('example@sqldat.com+')) p
'
EXEC (@query)