intentar algo como:
SELECT 1 AS Val FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 2 FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 3 FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 4 FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 5 FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 6 FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 7 FROM dual;
Es complicado, pero que va a hacer el truco.
Editado: Ah - que necesita para pasar de una variable para hacerle saber qué tan alto para ir ...
Entonces, ¿cómo de algo como:
SELECT t1.Val + t2.Val * 2 + t3.Val * 4 + t4.Val * 8 AS Val
FROM
(
SELECT 0 AS Val FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 1 FROM dual
) AS t1,
(
SELECT 0 AS Val FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 1 FROM dual
) AS t2,
(
SELECT 0 AS Val FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 1 FROM dual
) AS t3,
(
SELECT 0 AS Val FROM dual
UNION ALL SELECT 1 FROM dual
) AS t4
WHERE t1.Val + t2.Val * 2 + t3.Val * 4 + t4.Val * 8 <= 7;
Ok ... la edición de nuevo, ahora con WITH:
WiTH
A0 AS (SELECT 0 as N FROM DUAL UNION ALL SELECT 0 FROM DUAL),
A1 AS (SELECT 0 as N FROM A0, A0 AS B),
A2 AS (SELECT 0 as N FROM A1, A1 AS B),
A3 AS (SELECT 0 as N FROM A2, A2 AS B),
A4 AS (SELECT 0 as N FROM A3, A3 AS B),
A5 AS (SELECT 0 as N FROM A4, A4 AS B),
A6 AS (SELECT 0 as N FROM A5, A5 AS B),
Nums AS (SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY N) AS Val FROM A6)
SELECT *
FROM Nums
WHERE Val <= :NUM
;
retenido como oráculo, espero que sea correcto –
@Rob: Postgres también es compatible con PLSQL, pero no admite 'FROM DUAL', por lo que Oracle es correcto. –
Gracias Rob, es correcto, esta pregunta solo se refería a Oracle DB – Harish