I have datetime values stored in a field as strings. They are stored as strings because that's how they come across the wire and the raw values are used in other places.
For reporting, I want to convert the custom format string (yyyymmddhhmm) to a datetime field in a view. My reports will use the view and work with real datetime values. This will make queries involving date ranges much easier.
How do I perform this conversion? I created the view but can't find a way to convert the string to a datetime.
Thanks!
Update 1 -
Here's the SQL I have so far. When I try to execute, I get a conversion error "Conversion failed when converting datetime from character string."
How do I handle nulls and datetime strings that are missing the time portion (just yyyymmdd)?
SELECT
dbo.PV1_B.PV1_F44_C1 AS ArrivalDT,
cast(substring(dbo.PV1_B.PV1_F44_C1, 1, 8)+' '+substring(dbo.PV1_B.PV1_F44_C1, 9, 2)+':'+substring(dbo.PV1_B.PV1_F44_C1, 11, 2) as datetime) AS ArrDT,
dbo.MSH_A.MSH_F9_C2 AS MessageType,
dbo.PID_A.PID_F3_C1 AS PRC,
dbo.PID_A.PID_F5_C1 AS LastName,
开发者_如何学编程dbo.PID_A.PID_F5_C2 AS FirstName,
dbo.PID_A.PID_F5_C3 AS MiddleInitial,
dbo.PV1_A.PV1_F2_C1 AS Score,
dbo.MSH_A.MessageID AS MessageId
FROM dbo.MSH_A
INNER JOIN dbo.PID_A ON dbo.MSH_A.MessageID = dbo.PID_A.MessageID
INNER JOIN dbo.PV1_A ON dbo.MSH_A.MessageID = dbo.PV1_A.MessageID
INNER JOIN dbo.PV1_B ON dbo.MSH_A.MessageID = dbo.PV1_B.MessageID
According to here, there's no out-of-the-box CONVERT
to get from your yyyymmddhhmm
format to datetime.
Your strategy will be parsing the string to one of the formats provided on the documentation, then convert it.
declare @S varchar(12)
set @S = '201107062114'
select cast(substring(@S, 1, 8)+' '+substring(@S, 9, 2)+':'+substring(@S, 11, 2) as datetime)
Result:
2011-07-06 21:14:00.000'
This first changes your date string to 20110706 21:14
. Date format yyyymmdd as a string is safe to convert to datetime in SQL Server regardless of SET DATEFORMAT setting.
Edit:
declare @T table(S varchar(12))
insert into @T values('201107062114')
insert into @T values('20110706')
insert into @T values(null)
select
case len(S)
when 12 then cast(substring(S, 1, 8)+' '+substring(S, 9, 2)+':'+substring(S, 11, 2) as datetime)
when 8 then cast(S as datetime)
end
from @T
Result:
2011-07-06 21:14:00.000
2011-07-06 00:00:00.000
NULL
You can use CAST
or CONVERT
.
Example from the site:
G. Using CAST and CONVERT with datetime data
The following example displays the current date and time, uses CAST to change the current date and time to a character data type, and then uses CONVERT display the date and time in the ISO 8901 format.
SELECT GETDATE() AS UnconvertedDateTime, CAST(GETDATE() AS nvarchar(30)) AS UsingCast, CONVERT(nvarchar(30), GETDATE(), 126) AS UsingConvertTo_ISO8601; GO
Here is the result set.
UnconvertedDateTime UsingCast UsingConvertTo_ISO8601 ----------------------- ------------------------------ ------------------------------ 2006-04-18 09:58:04.570 Apr 18 2006 9:58AM 2006-04-18T09:58:04.570 (1 row(s) affected)
Generally, you can use this code:
SELECT convert(datetime,'20110706',112)
If you need to force SQL Server to use a custom format string, use the following code:
SET DATEFORMAT ymd
SELECT convert(datetime,'20110706')
A one liner:
declare @datestring varchar(255)
set @datestring = '201102281723'
select convert(datetime, stuff(stuff(@datestring,9,0,' '),12,0,':') , 112 )
Result:
2011-02-28 17:23:00.000
DECLARE @d VARCHAR(12);
SET @d = '201101011235';
SELECT CONVERT(SMALLDATETIME, STUFF(STUFF(@d,9,0,' '),12,0,':'));
Note that by storing date/time data using an inappropriate data type, you cannot prevent bad data from ending up in here. So it might be safer to do this:
WITH x(d) AS
(
SELECT d = '201101011235'
UNION SELECT '201101011267' -- not valid
UNION SELECT NULL -- NULL
UNION SELECT '20110101' -- yyyymmdd only
),
y(d, dt) AS
(
SELECT d,
dt = STUFF(STUFF(LEFT(d+'000000',12),9,0,' '),12,0,':')
FROM x
)
SELECT CONVERT(SMALLDATETIME, dt), ''
FROM y
WHERE ISDATE(dt) = 1 OR d IS NULL
UNION
SELECT NULL, d
FROM y
WHERE ISDATE(dt) = 0 AND d IS NOT NULL;
DECLARE @test varchar(100) = '201104050800'
DECLARE @dt smalldatetime
SELECT @dt = SUBSTRING(@test, 5, 2)
+ '/' + SUBSTRING(@test, 7, 2) + '/'
+ SUBSTRING(@test, 1, 4) + ' ' + SUBSTRING(@test, 9, 2)
+ ':' + SUBSTRING(@test, 11, 2)
SELECT @dt
Output:
2011-04-05 08:00:00
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