you can provide aliases to the new columns in the pivot
statement's IN
clause.
(NB: This is different from the standard where clause IN()
which does not allow aliases.)
with testdata as
(
select 'Fred' First_Name, 10 Items from dual
union
select 'John' First_Name, 5 Items from dual
union
select 'Jane' First_Name, 12 Items from dual
union
select 'Fred' First_Name, 15 Items from dual
)
select * from testdata
pivot (
sum(Items)
for First_Name
in ('Fred' as fred,'John' as john,'Jane' as jane)
)
and also for your aggregate clause which is necessary if you have multiple clauses..
with testdata as
(
select 'Fred' First_Name, 10 Items from dual
union
select 'John' First_Name, 5 Items from dual
union
select 'Jane' First_Name, 12 Items from dual
union
select 'Fred' First_Name, 15 Items from dual
)
select * from testdata
pivot (
sum(Items) itmsum,
count(Items) itmcnt
for First_Name
in ('Fred' as fred,'John' as john,'Jane' as jane)
)
returns
FRED_ITMSUM FRED_ITMCNT JOHN_ITMSUM JOHN_ITMCNT JANE_ITMSUM JANE_ITMCNT
----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
25 2 5 1 12 1
Of course you can then go full circle and use standard oracle aliasing and rename them to whatever you like including putting quotes back in again..
with testdata as
(
select 'Fred' First_Name, 10 Items from dual
union
select 'John' First_Name, 5 Items from dual
union
select 'Jane' First_Name, 12 Items from dual
union
select 'Fred' First_Name, 15 Items from dual
)
select FRED_ITMSUM "Fred's Sum", FRED_ITMCNT "Fred's Count"
, JOHN_ITMSUM "John's Sum", JOHN_ITMCNT "John's Count"
, JANE_ITMSUM "Janes's Sum", JANE_ITMCNT "Janes's Count"
from testdata
pivot (
sum(Items) itmsum,
count(Items) itmcnt
for First_Name
in ('Fred' as fred,'John' as john,'Jane' as jane)
)
gives
Fred's Sum Fred's Count John's Sum John's Count Janes's Sum Janes's Count
---------- ------------ ---------- ------------ ----------- -------------
25 2 5 1 12 1
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