Je dirais que dans ce but spécifique, la requête ci-dessous est à peu près aussi efficace que l'utilisation d'une table de recherche dédiée.
DECLARE @start DATE, @end DATE;
SELECT @start = '20110714', @end = '20110717';
;WITH n AS
(
SELECT TOP (DATEDIFF(DAY, @start, @end) + 1)
n = ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY [object_id])
FROM sys.all_objects
)
SELECT 'Bob', DATEADD(DAY, n-1, @start)
FROM n;
Résultats :
Bob 2011-07-14
Bob 2011-07-15
Bob 2011-07-16
Bob 2011-07-17
Vous en aurez probablement besoin en tant qu'ensemble, pas pour un seul membre, alors voici une façon d'adapter cette technique :
DECLARE @t TABLE
(
Member NVARCHAR(32),
RegistrationDate DATE,
CheckoutDate DATE
);
INSERT @t SELECT N'Bob', '20110714', '20110717'
UNION ALL SELECT N'Sam', '20110712', '20110715'
UNION ALL SELECT N'Jim', '20110716', '20110719';
;WITH [range](d,s) AS
(
SELECT DATEDIFF(DAY, MIN(RegistrationDate), MAX(CheckoutDate))+1,
MIN(RegistrationDate)
FROM @t -- WHERE ?
),
n(d) AS
(
SELECT DATEADD(DAY, n-1, (SELECT MIN(s) FROM [range]))
FROM (SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY [object_id])
FROM sys.all_objects) AS s(n)
WHERE n <= (SELECT MAX(d) FROM [range])
)
SELECT t.Member, n.d
FROM n CROSS JOIN @t AS t
WHERE n.d BETWEEN t.RegistrationDate AND t.CheckoutDate;
----------^^^^^^^ not many cases where I'd advocate between!
Résultats :
Member d
-------- ----------
Bob 2011-07-14
Bob 2011-07-15
Bob 2011-07-16
Bob 2011-07-17
Sam 2011-07-12
Sam 2011-07-13
Sam 2011-07-14
Sam 2011-07-15
Jim 2011-07-16
Jim 2011-07-17
Jim 2011-07-18
Jim 2011-07-19
Comme @Dems l'a souligné, cela pourrait être simplifié en :
;WITH natural AS
(
SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY [object_id]) - 1 AS val
FROM sys.all_objects
)
SELECT t.Member, d = DATEADD(DAY, natural.val, t.RegistrationDate)
FROM @t AS t INNER JOIN natural
ON natural.val <= DATEDIFF(DAY, t.RegistrationDate, t.CheckoutDate);