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Home/ Questions/Q 9180105
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T17:57:51+00:00 2026-06-17T17:57:51+00:00

Quick question that’s bugging me. When using PIVOT in T-SQL, can the ‘FOR..IN’ portion

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Quick question that’s bugging me.

When using PIVOT in T-SQL, can the ‘FOR..IN’ portion reference a table rather than a defined list of values?

Example, instead of something like:-

PIVOT (Count(widgets) For Team IN ([Dave],[Peter],[John]....etc))

Could you do something like:-

PIVOT (Count(widgets) for Team IN (SELECT TeamLeader FROM Teams))

I can find no reference to confirm whether or not this is possible.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T17:57:52+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 5:57 pm

    No, this is not possible.

    The PIVOT operator syntax dictates that these values is entered as a list:

    ...
    
    IN ( [first pivoted column], 
    
         [second pivoted column],
    
    ...
    ...
    
         [last pivoted column])
    

    But you can do this dynamically, something like:

    DECLARE @cols AS NVARCHAR(MAX);
    DECLARE @query AS NVARCHAR(MAX);
    
    
    select @cols = STUFF((SELECT distinct ',' +
                            QUOTENAME(Teamleader)
                          FROM Teams
                          FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE
                         ).value('.', 'NVARCHAR(MAX)') 
                            , 1, 1, '');
    
    
    SELECT @query = ' SELECT ' + @cols +
                    ' FROM AnotherTable a
                      PIVOT 
                      (
                         Count(widgets) For Team IN (' + @cols + ')' +
                      ') p';
    execute(@query);
    
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