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Home/ Questions/Q 781357
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T20:13:03+00:00 2026-05-14T20:13:03+00:00

I’ve got a table in a testing DB that someone apparently got a little

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I’ve got a table in a testing DB that someone apparently got a little too trigger-happy on when running INSERT scripts to set it up. The schema looks like this:

ID UNIQUEIDENTIFIER
TYPE_INT SMALLINT
SYSTEM_VALUE SMALLINT
NAME VARCHAR
MAPPED_VALUE VARCHAR

It’s supposed to have a few dozen rows. It has about 200,000, most of which are duplicates in which TYPE_INT, SYSTEM_VALUE, NAME and MAPPED_VALUE are all identical and ID is not.

Now, I could probably make a script to clean this up that creates a temporary table in memory, uses INSERT .. SELECT DISTINCT to grab all the unique values, TRUNCATE the original table and then copy everything back. But is there a simpler way to do it, like a DELETE query with something special in the WHERE clause?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T20:13:03+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:13 pm

    You don’t give your table name but I think something like this should work. Just leaving the record which happens to have the lowest ID. You might want to test with the ROLLBACK in first!

    BEGIN TRAN
    DELETE <table_name>
    FROM <table_name> T1
    WHERE EXISTS(
    SELECT * FROM <table_name> T2 
    WHERE     
    T1.TYPE_INT = T2.TYPE_INT  AND
    T1.SYSTEM_VALUE = T2.SYSTEM_VALUE  AND
    T1.NAME = T2.NAME  AND
    T1.MAPPED_VALUE = T2.MAPPED_VALUE  AND
    T2.ID > T1.ID
    )
    
    SELECT * FROM <table_name>
    
    ROLLBACK
    
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