I want to get the records of last month based on my db table [note] field "date_created".
What's the sql to do this?
last month - 2015-08-30 to 2015-09-30
I used below query used from link but get last three month records from table but getting error ORA-30089: missing or invalid
select *
from note
where to_date(DATE_CREATED) > to_date(CURRENT_DATE) - to_date(INTERVAL '3 months')
Even I used below query but still getting error : ORA-01861: literal does not match format string
select *
from note
where to_date(DATE_CREATED) BETWEEN '2015-08-30 00:00:00.0' AND '2015-09-30 00:00:00.0'
It is not Oracle syntax.
If you want to use INTERVAL you can use only YEAR_TO_MONTH or DAY_TO_SECOND interval.
It will looks like this (for last 3 months):
select *
from note
where to_date(DATE_CREATED) > to_date(CURRENT_DATE) - INTERVAL '0-3' YEAR TO MONTH
Or your can use standard function ADD_MONTHS:
select *
from note
where to_date(DATE_CREATED) > ADD_MONTHS( to_date(CURRENT_DATE), -3)
ADD_MONTHS will add months to your date. It could be positive or negative
Try using TO_DATE on the literal strings as well.
select * from note where to_date(DATE_CREATED) BETWEEN TO_DATE('2015-08-30', 'YYYY-MM-DD') AND TO_DATE('2015-09-30', 'YYYY-MM-DD');
Related
I have a table with date column in which date is updated in this format - 11/21/2022.
How can I get the results for the last 15 days using this date column in Teradata? Looks like need to change the date format in where clause.
I was using below query which does not work with this format
select *
from table_A
WHERE date BETWEEN (CURRENT_DATE - INTERVAL '30' DAY)
AND CURRENT_DATE
This does not give any results.
Assuming your date column be text, then you must first convert it to a bona fide date using the TO_DATE() function:
SELECT *
FROM table_A
WHERE TO_DATE("date", 'MM/DD/YYYY') BETWEEN (CURRENT_DATE - INTERVAL '30' DAY) AND CURRENT_DATE;
Note that ideally you should be storing your dates in actual date columns, not as text. This would avoid the need to call the clunky TO_DATE() function.
sql table
here in the table above named carpooling contains a column name start_on which has date time as timestamp i have to write a query to select all the rows having date as 25-11-20 using to_char and to_date.
You write a timestamp literal like this:
timestamp '2020-11-25 00:00:00'
so the full filtering condition will be
where start_on >= timestamp '2020-11-25 00:00:00'
and start_on < timestamp '2020-11-26 00:00:00'
Note that dates and timestamps are different in Oracle, and dates include times down to the second (this is for historical reasons - originally there was only the date type, and timestamp was added much later).
Use the TRUNC function, along with date and interval literals:
SELECT *
FROM CARPOOLING
WHERE START_ON BETWEEN DATE '2020-11-25'
AND (DATE '2020-11-26' - INTERVAL '0.000001' SECOND)
You can simply use to_date, but it's recommended to remove the time when comparing the dates. Otherwise, rows having the same date, but a different time will not be selected. Removing the time can be done using TRUNC.
So you can do something like this:
SELECT * FROM carpooling
WHERE TRUNC(start_on) = TO_DATE('2020-11-25','yyyy.mm.dd');
If you don't want to check the 25th of November 2020, but another data, change the date to match your goal.
I have the following code where I want to see if a date is less than a year ago:
select id
from mytable
where id= :p_id
and (to_date(trunc(sysdate), 'yyyy-mm-dd') - to_date(datewhen, 'yyyy-mm-dd')) < 365;
I keep getting the error:
ORA-01830: date format picture ends before converting entire input
string
Looking at other question with the same error on StackOverflow I see the solution usually is to use the to_date function which I am doing so I am unsure why this is occuring. The datewhen field is of type Date.
Do not use to_date() with the columnes of DATE data type. to_date() converts character string to a value of DATE data type. It makes no sense to convert the DATE to DATE. In a first step datewhen column of type DATE will be implicitly converted into a character data type by using the default date format (that's most probably not 'yyyy-mm-dd') and this is the culprit of the ORA-01830 error.
So your statement should look something like this:
select id from mytable where id = :p_id and (trunc(sysdate) - trunc(datewhen)) < 365;
I'd calculate the difference in the months or years instead of days:
... where months_between(sysdate, datewhen) < 12
If your datewhen column is char/varchar formatted as yyyy-mm-dd then you have to do the to_date conversion on datewhen, but not on SYSDATE: it's already a date and doesn't need to be converted.
To filter on a date within the past 365 days, compare it to SYSDATE - 365:
select id
from mytable
where id = :p_id
and to_date(datewhen, 'yyyy-mm-dd') > sysdate - 365;
But a year isn't always 365 days: on leap years it's 366 days. To get a one year ago value that's always correct, subtract an interval of one year from the current date:
select id
from mytable
where id = :p_id
and datewhen > sysdate - interval '1' year;
One more thing: the Oracle DATE type isn't just a date; it's a date and a time. SYSDATE returns the current date and time. Try this query:
select to_char(sysdate, 'yyyy-mm-dd hh24:mi:ss') from dual;
Unless you run this at exactly midnight you'll see a time component as well.
Say your query runs on 2 September 2017 at 10 AM and you're looking for a date within the past year. You'd expect to get the date 3 September 2016, but you wouldn't because at 10 AM SYSDATE is 3 September 2016 at 10:00:00. That's greater than the plain date 3 September 2016, which is 3 September 2016 at 0:00:00, so records with a datewhen of `2016-09-03' won't be included.
To ignore the time component of an Oracle DATE value, use TRUNC. Your final query should look something like this:
select id
from mytable
where id = :p_id
and datewhen > trunc(sysdate) - interval '1' year;
you use TO_DATE function when the value in character format
Syntax
The syntax for the TO_DATE function in Oracle/PLSQL is:
TO_DATE( string1 [, format_mask] [, nls_language] )
One of my column needs to be transformed into a date field. It contains a value that gives the YYMM and it should be translated into the last day of that month:
For example, 1312 should become 12/31/2013.
I have tried various last_day, to_char functions but not able to convert 1312 in a date format. Please help !!
Netezza is based on Postgres, so maybe the Postgres method will work. Here is Postgres code that works (see here):
select to_date('1312'||'01', 'YYMMDD') + interval '1 month' - interval '1 day'
I would first convert the number to a date, then add 1 month and subtract 1 day.
select add_months(to_date(1312, 'yymm'), 1) - 1 as the_date
I have a table with date column in it. I need to fetch the records from it based on
the given date.
Currently when i used the query:
select * from workingemployee_data where created_date like '20-Jan-2012'
I am getting those records which have created_date on 20-Jan-2012
But i want to get the records those were created 10 days earlier to a given
date (i.e) 20-Jan-2012.
Please suggest me on this.
This gives all records between today and 10 days ago:
SELECT *
FROM workingemployee
WHERE created_date BETWEEN sysdate - INTERVAL '10' DAY
AND sysdate
This gives all records entered exactly 10 days ago:
SELECT *
FROM workingemployee
WHERE created_date = sysdate - INTERVAL '10' DAY
Replace sysdate with exact date if you want.
Why do you use like and not = ?
Assuming that created_date is of type DATE, it's bad practice to rely on implicit conversion according to NLS_DATE_FORMAT (this is what happens when you compare a date and a string)
dd-mon-yyyy isn't a good format for querying since it deffers according to NLS_LANGUAGE better use mm for months numbers
So, either use #mvp's answer or do something like this:
SELECT *
FROM workingemployee
WHERE trunc(created_date) = to_date('20-01-2013', 'dd-mm-yyyy') - 10
SELECT *
FROM workingemployee
WHERE created_date > sysdate - INTERVAL '10' DAY;