Re: how to solve this problem - Mailing list pgsql-sql

From Steve Crawford
Subject Re: how to solve this problem
Date
Msg-id 443E99C5.3080800@pinpointresearch.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to how to solve this problem  (ivan marchesini <marchesini@unipg.it>)
Responses Re: how to solve this problem  (ivan marchesini <marchesini@unipg.it>)
List pgsql-sql
> I have a table where there are 20 columns named
> vinc1, vinc2, vinc3, vinc4, etc....
> 
> the values contained into each column are simply 1 or 0  (each column is
> dichotomic)
> 1 means presence
> 0 means absence
> 
> I would obtain a column (new_column) containg the name of the columns,
> comma separated, where the value is = 1
> 
> for example:
> 
> vinc1    vinc2    vinc3    vinc4    new_column
> 1    0    1    0    vinc1,vinc3
> 0    0    0    1    vinc4
> 0    1    1    1    vinc2,vinc3,vinc4
> 
> can someone help me to find the best way to obtain this result???
> thank you very much

Here's a brute-force method. Maybe someone else has a more elegant way. 
More info on the nature of your data and what you are trying to obtain 
from it would help in finding such elegance.

select  substr(  case when vinc1 = 1 then ',vinc1' else '' ||  case when vinc2 = 1 then ',vinc2' else '' ||  ...  case
whenvinc20 = 1 then ',vinc20' else ''  ,2) as new_column ...
 

As to the binary representation mentioned elsewhere, the idea is that 
you can view vinc1-vinc20 as bits in a binary number equal to vinc1 + 
2*vinc2 + 4*vinc3 + 8*vinc4...2^19*vinc20. Whether or not this is useful 
depends on what you are trying to do.

Cheers,
Steve


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