I want to get only Time from DateTime column using SQL query using SQL Server 2005 and 2008 Default output:
AttDate
==
2011-02-09 13:09:00
2011-02-09 14:10:00
I'd like this output:
AttDate Time
==
2011-02-09 13:开发者_开发知识库09:00 13:09
2011-02-09 14:10:00 14:10
SQL Server 2008:
SELECT cast(AttDate as time) [time]
FROM yourtable
Earlier versions:
SELECT convert(char(5), AttDate, 108) [time]
FROM yourtable
Assuming Sql server
SELECT CONVERT(VARCHAR(8),GETDATE(),108)
SQL Server 2008+ has a "time" datatype
SELECT
..., CAST(MyDateTimeCol AS time)
FROM
...
For older versions, without varchar conversions
SELECT
..., DATEADD(dd, DATEDIFF(dd, MyDateTimeCol, 0), MyDateTimeCol)
FROM
...
The simplest way to get the time from datetime without millisecond stack is:
SELECT convert(time(0),getDate())
Try using this
Date to Time
select cast(getdate() as time(0))
Time to TinyTime
select cast(orig_time as time(0))
Try this, it will work:
CONVERT(VARCHAR(8),DATETIME,114)
For your reference.
Try this:
select convert(nvarchar,CAST(getdate()as time),100)
Get date of server
SELECT LTRIM(RIGHT(CONVERT(VARCHAR(20), GETDATE(), 100), 7)) FROM TABLENAME WHERE ...
or
If it is stored in the table
SELECT LTRIM(RIGHT(CONVERT(VARCHAR(20), datename, 100), 7)) FROM TABLENAME WHERE ...
Result:
11:41AM
select AttDate,convert(char(5), AttDate, 108) [Time] from yourTableName
To get the time from datetime, we can use
SELECT CONVERT(VARCHAR(20), GETDATE(), 114)
select cast (as time(0))
would be a good clause. For example:
(select cast(start_date as time(0))) AS 'START TIME'
I often use this script to get Time from DateTime:
SELECT CONVERT(VARCHAR(9),RIGHT(YOURCOLUMN_DATETIME,9),108) FROM YOURTABLE
Declare @date Datetime = '06/18/2021 14:24:31';
Select FORMAT(@date, 'h\:m tt', 'en-US') As Timey
Output:
2:24pm
If you want date something in this style: Oct 23 2013 10:30AM
Use this
SELECT CONVERT(NVARCHAR(30),getdate(), 100)
convert()
method takes 3 parameters
- datatype
- Column/Value
- Style: Available styles are from 100 to 114. You can choose within range from. Choose one by one to change the date format.
on MSSQL2012 or above
cast(dateadd(ms,datediff(ms, [StartDateTime], [StopDateTime]),0) as Time(0))
...or...
convert(time(0),dateadd(ms,datediff(ms, [StartDateTime], [StopDateTime]),0) )
SQL Server 2012:
Select TRY_CONVERT(TIME, myDateTimeColumn) from myTable;
Personally, I prefer TRY_CONVERT() to CONVERT(). The main difference: If cast fails, TRY_CONVERT() returns NULL while CONVERT() raises an error.
You can use this:
SELECT CONVERT(VARCHAR(5), GETDATE(),8)
Output:
08:24
select convert(char(5), tbl_CustomerBooking.CheckInTime, 108) AS [time]
from tbl_CustomerBooking
select substr(to_char(colUmn_name, 'DD/MM/RRRR HH:MM:SS'),11,19) from table_name;
Output: from
05:11:26
05:11:24
05:11:24
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