I am saving a TimeSpan
(from .NET) value in my db as BIGINT
in SQL Server (saving the Ticks property). I want to know how to convert this BIGINT
value to a DATETIME
value in SQL Server (not in .NET). Any ideas?
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EDIT:
I am using NHibernate to map a TimeSpan
property I have, and it persists the Ticks property. I use it for relative hours (or minutes) control over some date.
Internally in the system everything is fine, this conversion isn't needed. However, when performing random queries in SQL Server, it is hard to understand the persisted form of a TimeSpan
. So, a function where I pass the Ticks
value and a DateTime
is returned would give the amount in hours, minutes and seconds that that TimeSpan
represents.
I don't really know SQL Server, but today a colleague of mine had the same problem and I think I've found a solution like this:
CAST(([ticks] - 599266080000000000) / 10000000 / 24 / 60 / 60 AS datetime)
where 599266080000000000 is the ticks value for 01/01/1900 00:00:00.
I'm not sure how accurate this will be with the seconds, but you could try something like:
Declare @TickValue bigint
Declare @Days float
Set @TickValue = 634024345696365272
Select @Days = @TickValue * POWER(10.00000000000,-7) / 60 / 60 / 24
Select DATEADD(d, Cast(@Days As int), Cast('0001-01-01' As DATE))
+ Cast( (@Days - FLOOR(@Days)) As DateTime)
Actually another way that would work in SQL 2005 is to note that the the number of ticks from 0001-01-01 to 1900-01-01 is 599266080000000000. With that you could do:
Declare @TickOf19000101 bigint
Declare @TickValue bigint
Declare @Minutes float
Set @TickOf19000101 = 599266080000000000
Set @TickValue = DATEDIFF(mi, 0 ,CURRENT_TIMESTAMP) * Cast(60 As BigInt)
* POWER(10.00000000000,7) + @TickOf19000101
Select @TickValue
Select @Minutes = (@TickValue - @TickOf19000101) * POWER(10.00000000000,-7) / 60
Select @Minutes
Select DATEADD(MI, @Minutes, '1900-01-01')
You can use this function taken from Pavel Gatilov's blog to convert a 64-bit integer to a datetime value with millisecond precision in server local time:
CREATE FUNCTION NetFxUtcTicksToDateTime
(
@Ticks bigint
)
RETURNS datetime
AS
BEGIN
-- First, we will convert the ticks into a datetime value with UTC time
DECLARE @BaseDate datetime;
SET @BaseDate = '01/01/1900';
DECLARE @NetFxTicksFromBaseDate bigint;
SET @NetFxTicksFromBaseDate = @Ticks - 599266080000000000;
-- The numeric constant is the number of .Net Ticks between the System.DateTime.MinValue (01/01/0001) and the SQL Server datetime base date (01/01/1900)
DECLARE @DaysFromBaseDate int;
SET @DaysFromBaseDate = @NetFxTicksFromBaseDate / 864000000000;
-- The numeric constant is the number of .Net Ticks in a single day.
DECLARE @TimeOfDayInTicks bigint;
SET @TimeOfDayInTicks = @NetFxTicksFromBaseDate - @DaysFromBaseDate * 864000000000;
DECLARE @TimeOfDayInMilliseconds int;
SET @TimeOfDayInMilliseconds = @TimeOfDayInTicks / 10000;
-- A Tick equals to 100 nanoseconds which is 0.0001 milliseconds
DECLARE @UtcDate datetime;
SET @UtcDate = DATEADD(ms, @TimeOfDayInMilliseconds, DATEADD(d, @DaysFromBaseDate, @BaseDate));
-- The @UtcDate is already useful. If you need the time in UTC, just return this value.
-- Now, some magic to get the local time
RETURN @UtcDate + GETDATE() - GETUTCDATE();
END
GO
Alternative code suitable for inline usage:
DECLARE @Ticks bigint
set @Ticks = 634899090000000000
select DATEADD(ms, ((@Ticks - 599266080000000000) -
FLOOR((@Ticks - 599266080000000000) / 864000000000) * 864000000000) / 10000,
DATEADD(d, (@Ticks - 599266080000000000) / 864000000000, '01/01/1900')) +
GETDATE() - GETUTCDATE()
A TimeSpan
is not a date, and saving it as such may cause confusion in the future.
Is there a reason you can't simply save the ticks to an integer field and not change its meaning?
Get the value of TimeSpan.TicksPerSecond
in .NET (just write it down).
Then, in your SQL, you can divide the tick count by that number, to give the number of seconds.
You can then divide this by 60 to get minutes, etc.
You should be able to use the CAST function built into SQL Server.
SELECT(CAST(CAST(CAST ('02/02/10' AS datetime) AS BIGINT) AS datetime))
you get 2010-02-02 00:00:00.000
I have figured it out on my own:
288,000,000,000 ticks represents 8 hours, so the following SELECT
returns a dummy date with the ammount of hours specified ...
SELECT DATEADD(millisecond, 288000000000/10000, CAST('1900-01-01' AS DATETIME))
Thanks to everyones efforts.
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