Author |
Topic |
mn757
Starting Member
15 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 06:34:01
|
Hi,I have a dateTime fields in the format of dd/mm/yyyy hh:mm:ss.I am attempting to query this as follows;select * from tablename where dateAndTime like 'dd/mm/yyyy %' I am not interested in the hh:mm:ss data. I cant seem to do this, although I have done this using mysql without any issues. Apologies if this is a novice question, but any help appreciated.My long term aim is to pass a date parameter to a stored procedure via an asp page.many thanks,Martin N. |
|
jimf
Master Smack Fu Yak Hacker
2875 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 06:50:20
|
select * from tablename where dateAndTime = CONVERT(varchar(10),@Date,103)Jim |
 |
|
SwePeso
Patron Saint of Lost Yaks
30421 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 07:00:11
|
select *from tablename where dateAndTime >= DATEADD(DAY, DATEDIFF(DAY, 0, @theDate), 0)and dateAndTime < DATEADD(DAY, DATEDIFF(DAY, 0, @theDate), 1) E 12°55'05.25"N 56°04'39.16" |
 |
|
mn757
Starting Member
15 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 07:27:24
|
Hi,Thanks both for your replies, however on each example I am getting out of date range error.thanks, |
 |
|
jimf
Master Smack Fu Yak Hacker
2875 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 07:28:31
|
Peso,Had I already had a cup of coffee I would have done thisselect * from tablename where CONVERT(varchar(10),dateAndTime,103) = @theDatewhich still would be bad. I've seen you use the DATEADD(..DATEDIFF(... before. It's a lot more typing, is it more accurate, efficient? Not in comparison to my wrong answer, just in general.Jim |
 |
|
SwePeso
Patron Saint of Lost Yaks
30421 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 07:33:32
|
Yes, but I can use any present index on the column which makes the searches much faster (index seek).With your code, you force a table scan. E 12°55'05.25"N 56°04'39.16" |
 |
|
jimf
Master Smack Fu Yak Hacker
2875 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 07:44:05
|
Cool, Thanks! I'm self taught at SQL and am realizing I have a lot of bad habits -- solutions that are really just new problems -- and I am trying to unlearn them.Jim"Every day I learn something that somebody else already knew!" |
 |
|
madhivanan
Premature Yak Congratulator
22864 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 08:19:40
|
<<I have a dateTime fields in the format of dd/mm/yyyy hh:mm:ss.>>What is the datatype of that column?MadhivananFailing to plan is Planning to fail |
 |
|
mn757
Starting Member
15 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 09:10:28
|
Thnaks everyone, all sorted now. |
 |
|
madhivanan
Premature Yak Congratulator
22864 Posts |
Posted - 2007-08-02 : 09:33:51
|
quote: Originally posted by mn757 Thnaks everyone, all sorted now.
How?MadhivananFailing to plan is Planning to fail |
 |
|
|