String.Format T-SQL'de işlevsellik gibi mi?


91

String.FormatNET'teki yönteme benzer dize manipülasyonu için T-SQL'de yerleşik bir işlev / genişletilmiş işlev arıyorum .

Yanıtlar:


72

SQL Server 2012 ve üzerini kullanıyorsanız kullanabilirsiniz FORMATMESSAGE. Örneğin.

DECLARE @s NVARCHAR(50) = 'World';
DECLARE @d INT = 123;
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Hello %s, %d', @s, @d)
-- RETURNS 'Hello World, 123'

MSDN'den daha fazla örnek: FORMATMESSAGE

SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Signed int %i, %d %i, %d, %+i, %+d, %+i, %+d', 5, -5, 50, -50, -11, -11, 11, 11);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Signed int with leading zero %020i', 5);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Signed int with leading zero 0 %020i', -55);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Unsigned int %u, %u', 50, -50);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Unsigned octal %o, %o', 50, -50);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Unsigned hexadecimal %x, %X, %X, %X, %x', 11, 11, -11, 50, -50);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Unsigned octal with prefix: %#o, %#o', 50, -50);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Unsigned hexadecimal with prefix: %#x, %#X, %#X, %X, %x', 11, 11, -11, 50, -50);
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Hello %s!', 'TEST');
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Hello %20s!', 'TEST');
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Hello %-20s!', 'TEST');
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('Hello %20s!', 'TEST');

NOTLAR:

  • 2012'de belgelenmemiş
  • 2044 karakterle sınırlıdır
  • % İşaretinden kaçmak için onu ikiye katlamanız gerekir.
  • Genişletilmiş olaylarda hataları günlüğe kaydediyorsanız, arama FORMATMESSAGE(zararsız) bir hata olarak ortaya çıkar

1
SQL 2012 kullanıyorsanız, FORMAT işlevini yukarıdaki tüm karmaşıklıklar olmadan kullanabilirsiniz :)
Reversed Engineer

1
Bunun çok daha fazla oyu olmalı! Harika bulmadan her zaman kaçınıldı çünkü yalnızca yerleşik ile çalışacağını varsaydı msg_number.
user692942

1
@Lankymart, çarp! Bunun kabul edilen cevap olması gerektiğine katılıyorum: basit, yerleşik ve muhteşem bir şekilde çalıştı.
Robert Synoradzki

5
@bijayk yalnızca belirli yer tutucu adlarını kabul eder, örneğin dizeler için% s, ints için% i.
g2server

2
@lostmylogin string.FormatT-SQL'de -style işlevselliği yoktur , bu size en yakın olanıdır.
Ian Kemp

54

xp_sprintf'e bir göz atın . aşağıdaki örnek.

DECLARE @ret_string varchar (255)
EXEC xp_sprintf @ret_string OUTPUT, 
    'INSERT INTO %s VALUES (%s, %s)', 'table1', '1', '2'
PRINT @ret_string

Sonuç şuna benzer:

INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (1, 2)

Dizenin maksimum boyutunda (255 karakter sınırı) bununla ilgili bir sorun buldum, bu nedenle kullanabileceğiniz alternatif bir işlev var:

create function dbo.fnSprintf (@s varchar(MAX), 
                @params varchar(MAX), @separator char(1) = ',')
returns varchar(MAX)
as
begin
declare @p varchar(MAX)
declare @paramlen int

set @params = @params + @separator
set @paramlen = len(@params)
while not @params = ''
begin
    set @p = left(@params+@separator, charindex(@separator, @params)-1)
    set @s = STUFF(@s, charindex('%s', @s), 2, @p)
    set @params = substring(@params, len(@p)+2, @paramlen)
end
return @s
end

To get the same result as above you call the function as follows:

print dbo.fnSprintf('INSERT INTO %s VALUES (%s, %s)', 'table1,1,2', default)

7
Just an FYI if any of your params contains a comma then you are out of luck. If you happen to pass one by accident your going to have some troubles figuring out what went wrong.
Kyle

16

I have created a user defined function to mimic the string.format functionality. You can use it.

stringformat-in-sql

UPDATE:
This version allows the user to change the delimitter.

-- DROP function will loose the security settings.
IF object_id('[dbo].[svfn_FormatString]') IS NOT NULL
    DROP FUNCTION [dbo].[svfn_FormatString]
GO

CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[svfn_FormatString]
(
    @Format NVARCHAR(4000),
    @Parameters NVARCHAR(4000),
    @Delimiter CHAR(1) = ','
)
RETURNS NVARCHAR(MAX)
AS
BEGIN
    /*
        Name: [dbo].[svfn_FormatString]
        Creation Date: 12/18/2020

        Purpose: Returns the formatted string (Just like in C-Sharp)

        Input Parameters:   @Format         = The string to be Formatted
                            @Parameters     = The comma separated list of parameters
                            @Delimiter      = The delimitter to be used in the formatting process

        Format:             @Format         = N'Hi {0}, Welcome to our site {1}. Thank you {0}'
                            @Parameters     = N'Karthik,google.com'
                            @Delimiter      = ','           
        Examples:
            SELECT dbo.svfn_FormatString(N'Hi {0}, Welcome to our site {1}. Thank you {0}', N'Karthik,google.com', default)
            SELECT dbo.svfn_FormatString(N'Hi {0}, Welcome to our site {1}. Thank you {0}', N'Karthik;google.com', ';')
    */
    DECLARE @Message NVARCHAR(400)
    DECLARE @ParamTable TABLE ( Id INT IDENTITY(0,1), Paramter VARCHAR(1000))

    SELECT @Message = @Format

    ;WITH CTE (StartPos, EndPos) AS
    (
        SELECT 1, CHARINDEX(@Delimiter, @Parameters)
        UNION ALL
        SELECT EndPos + (LEN(@Delimiter)), CHARINDEX(@Delimiter, @Parameters, EndPos + (LEN(@Delimiter)))
        FROM CTE
        WHERE EndPos > 0
    )

    INSERT INTO @ParamTable ( Paramter )
    SELECT
        [Id] = SUBSTRING(@Parameters, StartPos, CASE WHEN EndPos > 0 THEN EndPos - StartPos ELSE 4000 END )
    FROM CTE

    UPDATE @ParamTable 
    SET 
        @Message = REPLACE(@Message, '{'+ CONVERT(VARCHAR, Id) + '}', Paramter )

    RETURN @Message
END

1
I like this solution since I have reservations against using xp_ functions/SPs in production. I used your code as a base and allowed for the passing in of the delimiter, which eliminates any concern about commas being used in the data.
Tim Friesen

4

There is a way, but it has its limitations. You can use the FORMATMESSAGE() function. It allows you to format a string using formatting similar to the printf() function in C.

However, the biggest limitation is that it will only work with messages in the sys.messages table. Here's an article about it: microsoft_library_ms186788

It's kind of a shame there isn't an easier way to do this, because there are times when you want to format a string/varchar in the database. Hopefully you are only looking to format a string in a standard way and can use the sys.messages table.

Coincidentally, you could also use the RAISERROR() function with a very low severity, the documentation for raiseerror even mentions doing this, but the results are only printed. So you wouldn't be able to do anything with the resulting value (from what I understand).

Good luck!


1
Understand this is an old answer but assumption about FORMATMESSAGE() is incorrect, however understandable because it is undocumented but it will accept any string as a first parameter, see this answer by @g2server.
user692942

@Lankymart You are correct - this is an old answer. The ability to accept a string wasn't added until SQL 2012.
jj.

3

Raw t-sql is limited to CHARINDEX(), PATINDEX(), REPLACE(), and SUBSTRING() for string manipulation. But with sql server 2005 and later you can set up user defined functions that run in .Net, which means setting up a string.format() UDF shouldn't be too tough.


2

One more idea.

Although this is not a universal solution - it is simple and works, at least for me :)

For one placeholder {0}:

create function dbo.Format1
(
    @String  nvarchar(4000),
    @Param0  sql_variant
)
returns nvarchar(4000)
as
begin
    declare @Null nvarchar(4) = N'NULL';

    return replace(@String, N'{0}', cast(isnull(@Param0, @Null) as nvarchar(4000)));    
end

For two placeholders {0} and {1}:

create function dbo.Format2
(
    @String  nvarchar(4000),
    @Param0  sql_variant,
    @Param1  sql_variant
)
returns nvarchar(4000)
as
begin
    declare @Null nvarchar(4) = N'NULL';

    set @String = replace(@String, N'{0}', cast(isnull(@Param0, @Null) as nvarchar(4000)));
       return     replace(@String, N'{1}', cast(isnull(@Param1, @Null) as nvarchar(4000))); 
end

For three placeholders {0}, {1} and {2}:

create function dbo.Format3
(
    @String  nvarchar(4000),
    @Param0  sql_variant,
    @Param1  sql_variant,
    @Param2  sql_variant
)
returns nvarchar(4000)
as
begin
    declare @Null nvarchar(4) = N'NULL';

    set @String = replace(@String, N'{0}', cast(isnull(@Param0, @Null) as nvarchar(4000)));
    set @String = replace(@String, N'{1}', cast(isnull(@Param1, @Null) as nvarchar(4000))); 
       return     replace(@String, N'{2}', cast(isnull(@Param2, @Null) as nvarchar(4000)));
end

and so on...

Such an approach allows us to use these functions in SELECT statement and with parameters of nvarchar, number, bit and datetime datatypes.

For example:

declare @Param0 nvarchar(10) = N'IPSUM' ,
        @Param1 int          = 1234567  ,
        @Param2 datetime2(0) = getdate();

select dbo.Format3(N'Lorem {0} dolor, {1} elit at {2}', @Param0, @Param1, @Param2);  

1

I think there is small correction while calculating end position.

Here is correct function

**>>**IF OBJECT_ID( N'[dbo].[FormatString]', 'FN' ) IS NOT NULL
DROP FUNCTION [dbo].[FormatString]
GO
/***************************************************
Object Name : FormatString
Purpose : Returns the formatted string.
Original Author : Karthik D V http://stringformat-in-sql.blogspot.com/
Sample Call:
SELECT dbo.FormatString ( N'Format {0} {1} {2} {0}', N'1,2,3' )
*******************************************/
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[FormatString](
    @Format NVARCHAR(4000) ,
    @Parameters NVARCHAR(4000)
)
RETURNS NVARCHAR(4000)
AS
BEGIN
    --DECLARE @Format NVARCHAR(4000), @Parameters NVARCHAR(4000) select @format='{0}{1}', @Parameters='hello,world'
    DECLARE @Message NVARCHAR(400), @Delimiter CHAR(1)
    DECLARE @ParamTable TABLE ( ID INT IDENTITY(0,1), Parameter VARCHAR(1000) )
    Declare @startPos int, @endPos int
    SELECT @Message = @Format, @Delimiter = ','**>>**

    --handle first parameter
     set @endPos=CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@Parameters)
    if (@endPos=0 and @Parameters is not null) --there is only one parameter
        insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) values(@Parameters)
    else begin
        insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) select substring(@Parameters,0,@endPos)
    end

    while @endPos>0
    Begin
        --insert a row for each parameter in the 
        set @startPos = @endPos + LEN(@Delimiter)
        set @endPos = CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@Parameters, @startPos)
        if (@endPos>0)
            insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) 
                select substring(@Parameters,@startPos,@endPos - @startPos)
            else
                insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) 
                select substring(@Parameters,@startPos,4000)            
    End

    UPDATE @ParamTable SET @Message = 
        REPLACE ( @Message, '{'+CONVERT(VARCHAR,ID) + '}', Parameter )
    RETURN @Message
END
Go
grant execute,references on dbo.formatString to public 

1

Here is my version. Can be extended to accommodate more number of parameters and can extend formatting based on type. Currently only date and datetime types are formatted.

Example:

select dbo.FormatString('some string %s some int %s date %s','"abcd"',100,cast(getdate() as date),DEFAULT,DEFAULT)
select dbo.FormatString('some string %s some int %s date time %s','"abcd"',100,getdate(),DEFAULT,DEFAULT)

Output:

some string "abcd" some int 100 date 29-Apr-2017
some string "abcd" some int 100 date time 29-Apr-2017 19:40

Functions:

create function dbo.FormatValue(@param sql_variant)
returns nvarchar(100)
begin
/*
Tejasvi Hegde, 29-April-2017
Can extend formatting here.
*/
    declare @result nvarchar(100)

    if (SQL_VARIANT_PROPERTY(@param,'BaseType') in ('date'))
    begin
       select @result = REPLACE(CONVERT(CHAR(11), @param, 106), ' ', '-')
    end
    else  if (SQL_VARIANT_PROPERTY(@param,'BaseType') in ('datetime','datetime2'))
    begin
       select @result = REPLACE(CONVERT(CHAR(11), @param, 106), ' ', '-')+' '+CONVERT(VARCHAR(5),@param,108)
    end
    else
    begin
       select @result = cast(@param as nvarchar(100))
    end
    return @result

/*
BaseType:
bigint
binary
char
date
datetime
datetime2
datetimeoffset
decimal
float
int
money
nchar
numeric
nvarchar
real
smalldatetime
smallint
smallmoney
time
tinyint
uniqueidentifier
varbinary
varchar
*/   

end;


create function dbo.FormatString(
    @format nvarchar(4000)
    ,@param1 sql_variant = null
    ,@param2 sql_variant = null
    ,@param3 sql_variant = null
    ,@param4 sql_variant = null
    ,@param5 sql_variant = null
    )
returns nvarchar(4000)
begin
/*
Tejasvi Hegde, 29-April-2017

select dbo.FormatString('some string value %s some int %s date %s','"abcd"',100,cast(getdate() as date),DEFAULT,DEFAULT)
select dbo.FormatString('some string value %s some int %s date time %s','"abcd"',100,getdate(),DEFAULT,DEFAULT)
*/

    declare @result nvarchar(4000)

    select @param1 = dbo.formatValue(@param1)
    ,@param2 = dbo.formatValue(@param2)
    ,@param3 = dbo.formatValue(@param3)
    ,@param4 = dbo.formatValue(@param4)
    ,@param5 = dbo.formatValue(@param5)

    select @param2 = cast(@param2 as nvarchar)
    EXEC xp_sprintf @result OUTPUT,@format , @param1, @param2, @param3, @param4, @param5

    return @result

end;

Simplest answer for SQL Server 2008+. Keeps inputs as separate parameters. Uses xp_sprintf function and can be extended easily. xp_sprintf - docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/relational-databases/…
Jeff Lewis

0

here's what I found with my experiments using the built-in

FORMATMESSAGE() function

sp_addmessage @msgnum=50001,@severity=1,@msgText='Hello %s you are #%d',@replace='replace'
SELECT FORMATMESSAGE(50001, 'Table1', 5)

when you call up sp_addmessage, your message template gets stored into the system table master.dbo.sysmessages (verified on SQLServer 2000).

You must manage addition and removal of template strings from the table yourself, which is awkward if all you really want is output a quick message to the results screen.

The solution provided by Kathik DV, looks interesting but doesn't work with SQL Server 2000, so i altered it a bit, and this version should work with all versions of SQL Server:

IF OBJECT_ID( N'[dbo].[FormatString]', 'FN' ) IS NOT NULL
    DROP FUNCTION [dbo].[FormatString]
GO
/***************************************************
Object Name : FormatString
Purpose : Returns the formatted string.
Original Author : Karthik D V http://stringformat-in-sql.blogspot.com/
Sample Call:
SELECT dbo.FormatString ( N'Format {0} {1} {2} {0}', N'1,2,3' )
*******************************************/
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[FormatString](
@Format NVARCHAR(4000) ,
@Parameters NVARCHAR(4000)
)
RETURNS NVARCHAR(4000)
AS
BEGIN
    --DECLARE @Format NVARCHAR(4000), @Parameters NVARCHAR(4000) select @format='{0}{1}', @Parameters='hello,world'
    DECLARE @Message NVARCHAR(400), @Delimiter CHAR(1)
    DECLARE @ParamTable TABLE ( ID INT IDENTITY(0,1), Parameter VARCHAR(1000) )
    Declare @startPos int, @endPos int
    SELECT @Message = @Format, @Delimiter = ','

    --handle first parameter
     set @endPos=CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@Parameters)
    if (@endPos=0 and @Parameters is not null) --there is only one parameter
        insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) values(@Parameters)
    else begin
        insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) select substring(@Parameters,0,@endPos)
    end

    while @endPos>0
    Begin
        --insert a row for each parameter in the 
        set @startPos = @endPos + LEN(@Delimiter)
        set @endPos = CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@Parameters, @startPos)
        if (@endPos>0)
            insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) select substring(@Parameters,@startPos,@endPos)
        else
            insert into @ParamTable (Parameter) select substring(@Parameters,@startPos,4000)            
    End

    UPDATE @ParamTable SET @Message = REPLACE ( @Message, '{'+CONVERT(VARCHAR,ID) + '}', Parameter )
    RETURN @Message
END
Go
    grant execute,references on dbo.formatString to public

Usage:

print dbo.formatString('hello {0}... you are {1}','world,good')
--result: hello world... you are good


0

Actually there is no built in function similar to string.Format function of .NET is available in SQL server.

There is a function FORMATMESSAGE() in SQL server but it mimics to printf() function of C not string.Format function of .NET.

SELECT FORMATMESSAGE('This is the %s and this is the %s.', 'first variable', 'second variable') AS Result

-2

Not exactly, but I would check out some of the articles on string handling (amongst other things) by "Phil Factor" (geddit?) on Simple Talk.


-3

this is bad approach. you should work with assembly dll's, in which will do the same for you with better performance.

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