How to split comma-separated value in SQLite?
SQLite provide functions for this purpose, e.g. to get substring substr('your string', start_position, end_position)
, to get position of a specific character in a string instr('22:string', ':')
, and to get length of a string length('string')
.
Now let see the following examples:
select substr('22:khan', x, y);
returns a string starting at x and ends with y;
select substr('22:khan', 0, instr('22:khan',':'));
returns: 22
select substr('22:khan', instr('22:khan',':')+1, length('22:khan'));
returns: khan
select substr('22:khan',instr('22:khan',':'), length('22:khan'));
returns: :khan
select substr('Noor,Khan', 0, instr('Noor,Khan', ','));
returns: Noor
select substr('Noor,Khan', instr('Noor,Khan', ',')+1, length('Noor,Khan'));
returns: Khan
for more info visit: https://www.sqlite.org/lang_corefunc.html
You can use a Common Table Expression to split comma separated values in SQLite.
WITH split(word, csv) AS (
-- 'initial query' (see SQLite docs linked above)
SELECT
-- in final WHERE, we filter raw csv (1st row) and terminal ',' (last row)
'',
-- here you can SELECT FROM e.g. another table: col_name||',' FROM X
'Auto,A,1234444'||',' -- terminate with ',' indicating csv ending
-- 'recursive query'
UNION ALL SELECT
substr(csv, 0, instr(csv, ',')), -- each word contains text up to next ','
substr(csv, instr(csv, ',') + 1) -- next recursion parses csv after this ','
FROM split -- recurse
WHERE csv != '' -- break recursion once no more csv words exist
) SELECT word FROM split
WHERE word!=''; -- filter out 1st/last rows
Output is as expected:
Auto
A
1234444
I like the answer from @user1461607 except: it seems to me the SQLite documentation warns against assuming any particular order from a SELECT, both in the general case, and in the specific case of a recursive SELECT. Here, I modified that answer to add an ordering column in a manner that I think SQLite guarantees to work.
I also cosmetically changed the example from a comma-separated list to a path, to suggest there are cases where you really need to process things in a particular order. This example also prints out all the columns from the temporary table so it's slightly easier to see what went on. AFAICT, a CTE in SQLite does not have the usual ROWID column, so it seems like adding some ordering column yourself really is required to sleep soundly at night.
WITH RECURSIVE split(seq, word, str) AS (
SELECT 0, '/', 'home/ronburk/layers/branch'||'/'
UNION ALL SELECT
seq+1,
substr(str, 0, instr(str, '/')),
substr(str, instr(str, '/')+1)
FROM split WHERE str != ''
) SELECT * FROM split ORDER BY split.seq ASC;