I am using Access 2010 as a front-end to a database on SQL Server 2008. I have a date field which is stored as a nvarchar(50). I have the following value in the text field DateHr 12/04/11 16:49:23 , which should translate to April 11, 2012 4:49 PM (As is the date and time the record was created.).
I cannot change the datatype of the field to DateTime as it messes up the dates even more (Ex. 12/4/2011 4:49:23 PM). I cannot change the way the record is entered.
I need to display this field in the format "mm/dd/yy" and be able to do where clause in this format.
I have tried the following just to see if it displaying correctly but dtDate is displaying 11/12/04:
Select (Format(CDate([DateHr]),"yy/mm/dd")) as dtDate
If you need to carry out the conversion in access then you can try either of these:
Select Mid([DateHr],4,2) & "/" & Mid([DateHr],1,2) & "/" & Mid([DateHr],7,2) as dtDate
This I think will give you the date in a string format, otherwise you could try the following to get it in a valid date format:
Select Format(DateSerial(Mid([DateHr],7,2),Mid([DateHr],4,2),Mid([DateHr],1,2)),"MM/DD/YYYY") as dtDate
Create a SQL Server view to expand the year component of the date text to 4 digits. Then SELECT CDate([DateHr]) AS dtDate FROM YourView should work from the Access side. However it might be better still to have the view cast the date text to an actual date type ... then you could use it directly from Access without the need for CDate().
Related
When I update a column from a table with a date format of MMM DD,YYYY to a new format. The format doesn't change to the desired format which is YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS. Even when update different value like GETDATE(). The date will change but the format will remain the same.
Current value & format from column the type is varchar
DueDate
Jun 27 2020 12:00AM
Desired format
DueDate
2020-06-27 00:00:00.000
Update statement
update TableName
set
DueDate = CAST([DueDate] AS smalldatetime),
LastSyncDateTime = GETDATE()
where CaseGuid = 'DA2CE6A1-0394-463E-8E8D-962F3A24ADC8'
There is a huge confusion between "Date displaying format" and "Date storing format". The VERY short explanation is that what you mentioned is only a client side displaying format, while SQL Server have specific format which is used for storing dates (remember that the server stores zero and one only).
You can insert dates to a table using different styles (the official name for the displaying format is STYLE), and you can present the dates in the client side using different style, but it will always be stored the same from the "SQL Server point of view" according to the DATE type which is used.
In order to solve your original needs, all that you needed to do is to provide the server the information about the style which you use in the client side (in the query). This is done by using explicit CONVERT with the third parameter, which is the STYLE.
For example if you use in the client side an Israeli format like dd/MM/yyyy, then you should use CONVERT(DATE, '27/02/2021', 103).
For more information on different STYLEs you can check this documentation.
Note: If you want to display the dates in specific format which is not covered by the existing STYLEs then you can use the function FORMAT() in your query. This function is fully flexible to return the data in your specific format. Remember that this function returns the data as string and it will not be date anymore.
For example, let's say that I want to use the format: "Day:dd,Month:MM,Year:yyyy". So if the date is '27/02/2021' then I expect to get "Day:27,Month:02,Year:2021". In this case use below:
DECLARE #D DATE
SET #D = CONVERT(DATE, '27/02/2021', 103) -- convert string to date for storing
select FORMAT(#D, 'Day:dd, Month:MM, Year:yyyy') -- convert date to string for displaying
Solution use the format function
update TableName
set
DueDate = FORMAT (CAST([DueDate] AS smalldatetime),'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss'),
LastSyncDateTime = GETDATE()
where CaseGuid = 'DA2CE6A1-0394-463E-8E8D-962F3A24ADC8'
https://www.sqlshack.com/a-comprehensive-guide-to-the-sql-format-function/
May I know could I verify whether the date displayed in the field is in specific format
As per my requirement, the datetime should be displayed in format 'yyyy/mm/dd HH(24hr)/MM/SS'
Eg: The valid value should be '2014/07/18 14:16:48'. If the date is displayed as '18/07/2014 14:16:48', then it is invalid.
Using query how I verify whether it is shown in the format which I have expected. I could use IsDate option to verify it is a valid date and also I could use Mid function to verify the date separator which is '/', but how could I verify the format.
Thanks
If the column is stored as Text, use the SQL Like operator. Select valid dates:
SELECT * FROM myTable WHERE myDate Like "####/##/## ##:##:##"
Select invalid dates
SELECT * FROM myTable WHERE myDate Not Like "####/##/## ##:##:##"
# stands for a single digit.
See Like Operator.
But note that this only makes sense if myDate is a Text! If the type of myDate is Date/Time, the date is stored in a numeric format internally and is only formatted as a date for display. So don't confuse the date value per se and the date as it is displayed.
A Date/Time is always stored in the same way, no matter how it is formatted and displayed!
All you need to do is to open the Table in Design View and to set the Format property.
i'm working on a microsoft access DB with a column with values in the format Jan-2013, Feb-2014, May-2015.
Is it possible to convert those values to a valid datetime value from an Access select query? Only the month and year are important so day can be taken as just the first day of the month specified.
This works in Russian locale, so i suppose English will be good too:
cdate("01-" & [FieldWithMM-YYYY])
Since your fine using the first day of the month you can use DateValue to tag "the first" to the start of your existing string
Dim newDate as Date
newDate = DateValue("01-" & yourDateColumn)
or
Select DateValue("01-" & yourDateColumn) as FormattedAsADateNow
From yourTable
If you have nulls you'll need to protect against those or this will give a Type Mismatch.
I have the following code:
"SELECT top 1 * FROM CensusFacility_Records WHERE Division_Program = 'Division 1' AND JMS_UpdateDateTime = '" & date & "'"
The date format in column JMS_UpdateDateTime is:
8/22/2013 12:00:07 AM
How can I make sure that my "date" in the query is converted to the correct time format?
My date variable in my SQL query is a real/date time. I would like for it to match the format within the JMS_UpdateDateTime field.
If your database table is small enough, you can cast the value to an actual datetime inside your query, and pass the value in as a datetime parameter, so you're comparing dates instead of comparing strings.
If your table has a decent amount of records, don't do this, because it will be a performance hog.
SELECT top 1 *
FROM CensusFacility_Records
WHERE Division_Program = 'Division 1'
AND cast(JMS_UpdateDateTime as datetime) = #dateParam
I believe SQL Server will be able to read the string that's in your database and automatically cast it properly, assuming your server settings are standard.
But in any case, use parameterized SQL instead of passing in a string like you've got.
The format of your SQL DateTime is actually a bit of a red herring here - it can be displayed in any way the front end (e.g. Management Studio) chooses. The important thing here is that your date variable is in an unambiguous format. With this in mind I'd recommend using the ISO 8601 date/time format, e.g. date.ToString("o") (assuming date is a DateTime).
How do I check if a date string is in the MM/DD/YYYY format in SQL Server?
SET DATEFORMAT MDY;
SELECT CASE WHEN ISDATE(#string) = 1
AND #string LIKE '[0-1][0-9]/[0-3][0-9]/[1-2][0-9][0-9][0-9]'
THEN 1 ELSE 0 END;
If the result is 1, it's a valid date, but there's no guarantee that it's the date the user meant. If they enter:
06/07/2012
There is no way to know if they meant June 7 or July 6. Your best bet is to make users pick dates from drop-downs or calendar controls, which allows you to control the format and avoid any needless interpretation. Your application layer can use strongly typed variables / parameters and insert into properly typed columns.
If you're after the SQL Server dateformat to see whether it's MDY then use:
dbcc useroptions
And have a look at the dateformat Set Option
you convert date to datestring in this format MM/DD/YYYY using CONVERT function
select convert(varchar(10),getdate(),101)
The output will be as of Sept 8th 2012
09/08/2012
There is no need to validate, other then checking the date field is null or not
You have to do it outside the database. A database stores datetime internally in its own format. I dont think you can read what format the date is stored in. You can read it which ever way you like, for example dd/mm/yyyy or yyyy/mm/dd etc.
What you can do is check this value outside the database for any date field. You can use regular expression for that. But that will be outside the database.