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Home/ Questions/Q 322011
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T08:53:54+00:00 2026-05-12T08:53:54+00:00

This question is a follow up to this post: What is the most efficient/elegant

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This question is a follow up to this post:

What is the most efficient/elegant way to parse a flat table into a tree?

I liked the ClosureMap solution, but I have an additional problem to solve.

How can you easily retrieve the path to a particular node in a tree? For example, if you look at the tree provided:

ID Node Name

1 ‘Node 1’
2 ‘Node 1.1’
3 ‘Node 2’
4 ‘Node 1.1.1’
5 ‘Node 2.1’
6 ‘Node 1.2’

The path to 1.1.1 would be:

ID = 1, 2, 4

Without doing recursive SQL calls, is there an elegant way to retrieve a path?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T08:53:55+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 8:53 am
    SELECT ancestor_id
    FROM ClosureTable
    WHERE descendant_id = 4;
    

    Returns the values 1, 2, 4. But they are returned on separate rows, and they give no indication that they’re in the right order (we might not assume numerical order corresponds to tree hierarchy order).

    Sometimes you would also store the depth for every path in the ClosureTable. But even if not, you can count how many ancestors a given node has, and use that to sort:

    SELECT ct1.ancestor_id, COUNT(*) AS depth
    FROM ClosureTable ct1
     JOIN ClosureTable ct2 ON (ct1.ancestor_id = ct2.descendant_id)
    WHERE ct1.descendant_id = 4
    GROUP BY ct1.ancestor_id
    ORDER BY depth;
    

    Yes, this still returns the result in three rows. If you use MySQL, you have access to GROUP_CONCAT(). Otherwise it’s easy to fetch three rows and concatenate their values in application code.

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