I have a Proc SQL code block running in SAS Enterprise Guide. I need to find the number of days between two dates
proc sql;
select col_A,col_B,col_C, (put (date(),yymmdd10.) - col_C) as age_bucket
from DB2.Table_A;
quit;
col_C is a date of the 'YYYY-MM-DD' format (e.g. 2022-05-02)
I am subtracting col_C from today's date and want to get the total number of days between them in as age_bucket. I am getting the following error.
ERROR: Expression using subtraction (-) requires numeric types.
How do I go about this?
The Table_A is from DB2 database.
Using the PUT() function to convert the current date into a character string is going to make it impossible to perform arithmetic with the result.
If COL_C has a DATE value it does not matter how the value is displayed (formats just impact how values are displayed). A DATE value is just the number of days since 1960. You only need to subtract the two numbers to calculate the difference in days.
(date() - col_C) as age_bucket
If COL_C has a DATETIME value (number of seconds since 1960) then first convert it to a DATE value.
(date() - datepart(col_C)) as age_bucket
If COL_C is a character string in the style YYYY-MM-DD then use the INPUT() function with the YYMMDD informat to convert the string into a date value.
(date() - input(col_C,yymmdd10.)) as age_bucket
I think DB2 supports the DAYS_BETWEEN() function which will give you the number of days between the 2 date arguments.
https://www.db2tutorial.com/db2-date-functions/
Use YRDIF Function to get age in years. Subtracting dates will get your age in days.
Both dates should be SAS dates, numeric with a date format.
proc sql;
select col_A,
col_B,
col_C,
floor(YRDIF(input(col_C, yymmdd10.), today(),"AGE")) as age_bucket
from DB2.Table_A;
quit;
Related
I have a column called received_dt_key in Varchar in the format DD-MM-YYYY (e.g. 30-07-2021).
I would like to select all from the table for dates between 31-12-2021 and 01-01-2022. I have tried version of the below query and a blank table is the output.
SELECT *
FROM SD_BDAY
WHERE to_char(to_date(RECEIVED_DT_KEY, 'DD-MM-YYYY')) > to_char(to_date('31-12-2021', 'DD-MM-YYYY'))
and to_char(to_date(RECEIVED_DT_KEY, 'DD-MM-YYYY')) < to_char(to_date('01-01-2022', 'DD-MM-YYYY'));
Don't compare dates as strings. Compare them as dates:
SELECT *
FROM SD_BDAY
WHERE to_date(RECEIVED_DT_KEY, 'DD-MM-YYYY') > to_date('31-12-2021', 'DD-MM-YYYY')
and to_date(RECEIVED_DT_KEY, 'DD-MM-YYYY') < to_date('01-01-2022', 'DD-MM-YYYY');
If you try to compare them as strings then you are looking for string that is greater than '31-12-2021' and less than '01-01-2022' and the string comparison will look at the first character and see if it can find a match which is greater than '3' and less than '0'; there can never be such a match so it is quite correct that when comparing as strings nothing is returned.
As pointed out by #AlexPoole in comments, even if you compare the values as dates (rather than strings) you will still never return a result as finding values that are greater than DATE '2021-12-31' and less than DATE '2022-01-01' would return all dates from 2021-12-31 00:00:01 to 2021-12-31 23:59:59; however, your values will always be converted with a midnight time component and, therefore, will never fall into that range so cannot be returned.
What you probably want is to use >= rather than > and then it would match values on 2021-12-31.
The best thing would be to store calendar dates in date data type column. Why else do you think Oracle designed that data type? This way you may create normal indexes on data data type columns, or, if needed, partition the table by that date column.
Still, if you insist in having the calendar dates stored like that, I think the below should work:
SELECT *
FROM SD_BDAY
WHERE to_date(RECEIVED_DT_KEY, 'DD-MM-YYYY') >
to_date('31-12-2021', 'DD-MM-YYYY')
and to_date(RECEIVED_DT_KEY, 'DD-MM-YYYY') <
to_date('01-01-2022', 'DD-MM-YYYY');
Thus you compare calandar dates with calendar dates, not varchar with varchar, as it results from the code you have written.
And what if in the varchar2 column there is somethibng that can't be converted to date? That is why it is best to use the date data type.
I have a problem with converting a varchar2 fields into a date format.
I got 2 columns with the datatyp varchar2, one is called qtime the other is called ztime. Both fields contain strings in this format (f.e. 152015 -> would be a timestamp 15:20:15).
For reporting reasons I need to convert this fields into a date format, afterwards I want to substract (qtime-ztime) the fields an convert them into the format [hh] (f.e. after the operation 01:20:00 would be -> 01). Is it possible to to this within Oracle SQL 12c? The biggest problem for me right now is that I don't get those Strings converted into a date format.
select TO_DATE(qtime,'MM/DD/YYYY hh24:mi:ss') just gives me
ORA-01861:"literal does not match format string"
select TO_DATE(qtime,'hh24mmss') gives me a wrong Date
01.03.2018
select TO_TIMESTAMP(qtime,'hh24mmss') gives me a wrong Date
01.03.2018 BUT the correct time with f.e. 15:20:15,0000000
Thank you in advance, any help is appreciated
Note: I only have reading rights on the database Oracle 12c, so I need to to this within Statements
"The Database contains another column with the correct date for each time"
The missing piece of the puzzle! Concatenate the two columns to get something which can be converted to an Oracle DATE:
select to_date(qdate||qtime, 'yyyymmddhh24miss') as qdatetime
, to_date(zdate||ztime, 'yyyymmddhh24miss') as zdatetime
from your_table
Once you have done that you can perform arithmetic of the dates e.g.
select id
, zdatetime - qdatetime as time_diff
from ( select id
, to_date(qdate||qtime, 'yyyymmddhh24miss') as qdatetime
, to_date(zdate||ztime, 'yyyymmddhh24miss') as zdatetime
from your_table
)
If you want the number of hours in the difference you can include this expression in the projection of the outer query:
, extract( hour from (zdatetime - qdatetime) day to second) as hrs_ela
First off, if you are trying to convert a varchar2 into a date without specifying neither day nor month, it will default to the first day of the current month:
If you specify a date value without a date, then the default date is the first day of the current month.
You can read up more here
Also in 2nd and 3rd your example, you are using 'hh24mmss' for specifying hour, minute and second components, but do note that correct format for minutes is 'mi' and not 'mm', which is used for months.
So the solution is to concatenate both date and time component when creating the date as the other answer suggested, tho I would recommend using a single date field as it can store the information you need.
In my DB, there is a date field in the format yyyymmdd.
I have to get all the dates in the format dd-mm-yyyy for that particlar date.
ex:
Date
20170130
20170228
20170325
for the above dates, I need the output in the below format with the dates and day of the particular dates
date day
30-01-2017 tuesday
28-02-2017 tuesday
25-03-2017 saturday
If the column is a string, then it can hold invalid date values such as February 31, one way to avoid this is by a small function such as this:
create or replace
function my_to_date( p_str in varchar2 ) return date
is
begin
return to_date( p_str );
exception
when others then
return null;
end;
\\
select to_char(my_to_date('20170231'),'DD-MM-YYYY Day')
from dual
\\
Demo
Try below:
Select to_char(yrdate, 'dd-mm-yyyy'), to_char(yrdate, 'D') from yrtable
It sounds like your dates aren't actually DATE fields but some kind of CHAR field? The best option would be to convert to DATE and then convert back to CHAR:
SELECT TO_CHAR(TO_DATE(mydate, 'YYYYMMDD'), 'DD-MM-YYYY Day')
FROM mytable;
This uses the YYYYMMDD mask to convert your string into a date, then uses the mask DD-MM-YYYY Day to convert it back into a string. Use day if you want the day name in lowercase (as in your OP).
#user2778168 answer will give you the results you want. But why?
Your database does not have dates stored in yyyymmdd format or any other date format for at mater, unless it's defined with a character type definition. Oracle stores all dates in a single internal structure, and with only slight variations timestamps are the same. The format used only tells Oracle how to display the value or to convert a string to a date. Unless a specific format is specified Oracle uses the NLS_DATE_FORMAT for this determination. See here and scan down to "Datetime Format Models" for format specifications.
To see this run the following:
select value
from nls_session_parameters
where parameter = 'NLS_DATE_FORMAT';
Select yrdate default_format
, to_char(yrdate, 'dd-mm-yyyy') specified_format
, dump(yrdate) unformated
from yrtable;
alter session set nls_date_format = 'Month dd,yyyy';
Rerun the above queries.
It seems you hold date column(date1) in character format. Suppose you have a table named days:
SQL> desc days
date1 varchar2(10)
then,
we should convert it into date, and then into char format, with aliases in quotation marks to provide lowercase aliases as you wanted.
perhaps your database's date language is non-english like mine(turkish), then you need to convert it to english.
lastly, it'a appropriate to order the results according to converted date, seen from your output. So we can use the following SQL :
select to_char(to_date(date1,'yyyymmdd'),'dd-mm-yyyy') "date",
to_char(to_date(date1,'yyyymmdd'),'day','nls_date_language=english') "day"
from days
order by to_date(date1,'yyyymmdd');
D e m o
Select a.APPL_NBR, b.APPL_NBR, a. APPL_RCVD_DATE, b.INITDATE
From DW_ODS.N_APP_DECHIST a
Join EDW_WDS.D_APP_INFO b
On a.APPL_NBR=b.APPL_NBR
Where a. APPL_RCVD_DATE != b.INITDATE
order by a. APPL_RCVD_DATE
I'm getting this error "ORA-00932: inconsistent datatypes" I don't know how to convert numbers to date (I'm a QA Engineer and my SQL knowledge is limited)
APPL_RCVD_DATE: Data type Number
INITDATE: Data Type Date
Can someone give me a hand about how to convert from numbers to data or vice-versa?
Use TO_DATE to convert strings into dates, and TO_CHAR to convert dates into strings. See the documentation for details of the format masks you can use.
Eg.
select to_date('01012015', 'ddmmyyyy'), to_char(sysdate, 'fmDay Month yyyy')
from dual;
I want to select a varchar field as a date field
For example a field has this value "30.12.2011 21:15:03"
and when i select this
select DATE from TABLE where DATE = '30.12.2011'
i get no result.
You ask about getting the date part of a timestamp field, but what your question is actually about is filtering on the date of a timestamp field. There is a much simpler method of accomplishing that: you can use the knowledge that all the possible timestamps on a specific date won't have any timestamps for different dates between them.
select DATE
from TABLE
where DATE >= '30.12.2011' and DATE < '31.12.2011'
Your edit explains that you haven't got a timestamp field at all. Nevertheless, a similar approach may still work:
select DATE
from TABLE
where DATE LIKE '30.12.2011 %'
Or the Firebird-specific
select DATE
from TABLE
where DATE starting with '30.12.2011 '
Assuming the field is a date field, use the DATE introducer combined with yyyy-mm-dd (or TIMESTAMP with time as well).
So use:
select datefield from sometable where datefield = DATE '2011-12-30'
Technically you can leave off the introducer, but it is 'correcter' in the light of the SQL standard.
Assuming a TIMESTAMP field, you won't get results unless the timestamp is (always) at 00:00:00.0000 (in which case it should have been a DATE instead).
For the comparison to work, you need to use either BETWEEN, eg:
select timestampfield from sometable
where timestampfield BETWEEN '2011-12-30 00:00:00.0000' AND '2011-12-30 23:59:59.9999'
or truncate the timestamp to a date (this may adversely effect performance if the timestamp is indexed, because then the index can no longer be used), eg:
select timestampfield from sometable
where CAST(timestampfield AS DATE) = '2011-12-30'
If the date is stored in a VARCHAR field (which in itself is a bad idea), there are several solutions, first is to handle it as date manipulation:
select varcharfield from sometable
where CAST(CAST(varcharfield AS TIMESTAMP) AS DATE) = '2011-12-30'
The double cast is required if you have a time-component in VARCHARFIELD as well. This assumes dates in the supported format listed below. If you use BETWEEN as above, you can use a single cast to timestamp)
The other solution (as suggested by hvd) is to treat it purely as string manipulation, for example:
select varcharfield from sometable
where varcharfield STARTING WITH '30.12.2011'
This has its own set of problems if you want to select ranges. Bottomline: use a real TIMESTAMP field!
Note that Firebird supports multiple formats:
yyyy-mm-dd, eg 2014-05-25 (ISO-8601 format, probably best to use as it reduces confusion)
dd.mm.yyyy, eg 25.05.2014
mm/dd/yyyy, eg 05/25/2014
mm-dd-yyyy, eg 05-25-2014
dd mmm yyyy, eg 25 MAY 2014 (+ variations with a -, . or / as separator)
mmm dd yyyy, eg MAY 25 2014 (+ variations with a -, . or / as separator)
select DATE from TABLE where cast(DATE as date) = '30.12.2011'
Date field is a timestamp
Here is the answere to my question:
CAST
(
SUBSTRING
(field FROM 1 FOR 2)
||'.'||
SUBSTRING
(field FROM 4 FOR 2)
||'.'||
SUBSTRING
(field FFROM 7 FOR 4)
AS DATE)
This took me 5 hours to find this out, maybe there should be a "-" instead of "." but it works.