Monday, February 25, 2013

SQL SERVER – Few Useful DateTime Functions to Find Specific Dates



----Today
SELECT GETDATE() 'Today'
----Yesterday
SELECT DATEADD(d,-1,GETDATE()) 'Yesterday'
----First Day of Current Week
SELECT DATEADD(wk,DATEDIFF(wk,0,GETDATE()),0) 'First Day of Current Week'
----Last Day of Current Week
SELECT DATEADD(wk,DATEDIFF(wk,0,GETDATE()),6) 'Last Day of Current Week'
----First Day of Last Week
SELECT DATEADD(wk,DATEDIFF(wk,7,GETDATE()),0) 'First Day of Last Week'
----Last Day of Last Week
SELECT DATEADD(wk,DATEDIFF(wk,7,GETDATE()),6) 'Last Day of Last Week'
----First Day of Current Month
SELECT DATEADD(mm,DATEDIFF(mm,0,GETDATE()),0) 'First Day of Current Month'
----Last Day of Current Month
SELECT DATEADD(ms,- 3,DATEADD(mm,0,DATEADD(mm,DATEDIFF(mm,0,GETDATE())+1,0))) 'Last Day of Current Month'
----First Day of Last Month
SELECT DATEADD(mm,-1,DATEADD(mm,DATEDIFF(mm,0,GETDATE()),0)) 'First Day of Last Month'
----Last Day of Last Month
SELECT DATEADD(ms,-3,DATEADD(mm,0,DATEADD(mm,DATEDIFF(mm,0,GETDATE()),0))) 'Last Day of Last Month'
----First Day of Current Year
SELECT DATEADD(yy,DATEDIFF(yy,0,GETDATE()),0) 'First Day of Current Year'
----Last Day of Current Year
SELECT DATEADD(ms,-3,DATEADD(yy,0,DATEADD(yy,DATEDIFF(yy,0,GETDATE())+1,0))) 'Last Day of Current Year'
----First Day of Last Year
SELECT DATEADD(yy,-1,DATEADD(yy,DATEDIFF(yy,0,GETDATE()),0)) 'First Day of Last Year'
----Last Day of Last Year
SELECT DATEADD(ms,-3,DATEADD(yy,0,DATEADD(yy,DATEDIFF(yy,0,GETDATE()),0))) 'Last Day of Last Year'

Date and Time Functions (Transact-SQL)

The Transact-SQL date and time data types are listed in the following table.
Data type Format Range Accuracy Storage size (bytes) User-defined fractional second precision Time zone offset
time hh:mm:ss[.nnnnnnn] 00:00:00.0000000 through 23:59:59.9999999 100 nanoseconds 3 to 5 Yes No
date YYYY-MM-DD 0001-01-01 through 9999-12-31 1 day 3 No No
smalldatetime YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss 1900-01-01 through 2079-06-06 1 minute 4 No No
datetime YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss[.nnn] 1753-01-01 through 9999-12-31 0.00333 second 8 No No
datetime2 YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss[.nnnnnnn] 0001-01-01 00:00:00.0000000 through 9999-12-31 23:59:59.9999999 100 nanoseconds 6 to 8 Yes No
datetimeoffset YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss[.nnnnnnn] [+|-]hh:mm 0001-01-01 00:00:00.0000000 through 9999-12-31 23:59:59.9999999 (in UTC) 100 nanoseconds 8 to 10 Yes Yes
The Transact-SQL rowversion data type is not a date or time data type. timestamp is a deprecated synonym for rowversion.
The Transact-SQL date and time functions are listed in the following tables. For more information about determinism, see Deterministic and Nondeterministic Functions.

Functions That Get System Date and Time Values

All system date and time values are derived from the operating system of the computer on which the instance of SQL Server is running.

Higher-Precision System Date and Time Functions

SQL Server 2008 R2 obtains the date and time values by using the GetSystemTimeAsFileTime() Windows API. The accuracy depends on the computer hardware and version of Windows on which the instance of SQL Server is running. The precision of this API is fixed at 100 nanoseconds. The accuracy can be determined by using the GetSystemTimeAdjustment() Windows API.
Function Syntax Return value Return data type Determinism
SYSDATETIME SYSDATETIME () Returns a datetime2(7) value that contains the date and time of the computer on which the instance of SQL Server is running. The time zone offset is not included. datetime2(7) Nondeterministic
SYSDATETIMEOFFSET SYSDATETIMEOFFSET ( ) Returns a datetimeoffset(7) value that contains the date and time of the computer on which the instance of SQL Server is running. The time zone offset is included. datetimeoffset(7) Nondeterministic
SYSUTCDATETIME SYSUTCDATETIME ( ) Returns a datetime2(7) value that contains the date and time of the computer on which the instance of SQL Server is running. The date and time is returned as UTC time (Coordinated Universal Time). datetime2(7) Nondeterministic

Lower-Precision System Date and Time Functions

Function Syntax Return value Return data type Determinism
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP CURRENT_TIMESTAMP Returns a datetime2(7) value that contains the date and time of the computer on which the instance of SQL Server is running. The time zone offset is not included. datetime Nondeterministic
GETDATE GETDATE ( ) Returns a datetime2(7) value that contains the date and time of the computer on which the instance of SQL Server is running. The time zone offset is not included. datetime Nondeterministic
GETUTCDATE GETUTCDATE ( ) Returns a datetime2(7) value that contains the date and time of the computer on which the instance of SQL Server is running. The date and time is returned as UTC time (Coordinated Universal Time). datetime Nondeterministic

Functions That Get Date and Time Parts

Function Syntax Return value Return data type Determinism
DATENAME DATENAME ( datepart , date ) Returns a character string that represents the specified datepart of the specified date. nvarchar Nondeterministic
DATEPART DATEPART ( datepart , date ) Returns an integer that represents the specified datepart of the specified date. int Nondeterministic
DAY DAY ( date ) Returns an integer that represents the day day part of the specified date. int Deterministic
MONTH MONTH ( date ) Returns an integer that represents the month part of a specified date. int Deterministic
YEAR YEAR ( date ) Returns an integer that represents the year part of a specified date. int Deterministic

Functions That Get Date and Time Difference

Function Syntax Return value Return data type Determinism
DATEDIFF DATEDIFF ( datepart , startdate , enddate ) Returns the number of date or time datepart boundaries that are crossed between two specified dates. int Deterministic

Functions That Modify Date and Time Values

Function Syntax Return value Return data type Determinism
DATEADD DATEADD (datepart , number , date ) Returns a new datetime value by adding an interval to the specified datepart of the specified date. The data type of the date argument Deterministic
SWITCHOFFSET SWITCHOFFSET (DATETIMEOFFSET , time_zone) SWITCHOFFSET changes the time zone offset of a DATETIMEOFFSET value and preserves the UTC value. datetimeoffset with the fractional precision of the DATETIMEOFFSET Deterministic
TODATETIMEOFFSET TODATETIMEOFFSET (expression , time_zone) TODATETIMEOFFSET transforms a datetime2 value into a datetimeoffset value. The datetime2 value is interpreted in local time for the specified time_zone. datetimeoffset with the fractional precision of the datetime argument Deterministic

Functions That Set or Get Session Format

Function Syntax Return value Return data type Determinism
@@DATEFIRST @@DATEFIRST Returns the current value, for the session, of SET DATEFIRST. tinyint Nondeterministic
SET DATEFIRST SET DATEFIRST { number | @number_var } Sets the first day of the week to a number from 1 through 7. Not applicable Not applicable
SET DATEFORMAT SET DATEFORMAT { format | @format_var } Sets the order of the dateparts (month/day/year) for entering datetime or smalldatetime data. Not applicable Not applicable
@@LANGUAGE @@LANGUAGE Returns the name of the language that is currently being used. @@LANGUAGE is not a date or time function. However, the language setting can affect the output of date functions. Not applicable Not applicable
SET LANGUAGE SET LANGUAGE { [ N ] 'language' | @language_var } Sets the language environment for the session and system messages. SET LANGUAGE is not a date or time function. However, the language setting affects the output of date functions. Not applicable Not applicable
sp_helplanguage sp_helplanguage [ [ @language = ] 'language' ] Returns information about date formats of all supported languages. sp_helplanguage is not a date or time stored procedure. However, the language setting affects the output of date functions. Not applicable Not applicable

Functions That Validate Date and Time Values

Function Syntax Return value Return data type Determinism
ISDATE ISDATE ( expression ) Determines whether a datetime or smalldatetime input expression is a valid date or time value. int ISDATE is deterministic only if you use it with the CONVERT function, when the CONVERT style parameter is specified, and when style is not equal to 0, 100, 9, or 109.
Topic Description
Using Date and Time Data Provides information and examples that are common to date and time data types and functions.
CAST and CONVERT (Transact-SQL) Provides information about the conversion of date and time values to and from string literals and other date and time formats.
Writing International Transact-SQL Statements Provides guidelines for portability of databases and database applications that use Transact-SQL statements from one language to another, or that support multiple languages.
ODBC Scalar Functions (Transact-SQL) Provides information about ODBC scalar functions that can be used in Transact-SQL statements. This includes ODBC date and time functions.
Data Type Mapping with Distributed Queries Provides information about how date and time data types affect distributed queries between servers that have different versions of SQL Server or different providers.

Commonly Used Functions in SQL Server 2005/2008

  • DateTime Function in SQL Server
    • GETDATE()
    • DATEPART()
    • DATEDIFF()
    • DATENAME()
    • DAY()
    • MONTH()
    • YEAR()
  • String Functions  
    • ASCII()
    • CHAR()
    • NCHAR()
    • DIFFERENCE()  
    • LEFT()  
    • RIGHT()  
    • LTRIM()  
    • RTRIM()
    • REPLACE()
    • QUOTNAME()
    • REVERSE()   
    • CHARINDEX()
    • PATINDEX()
    • LEN()
    • STUFF()
    • SUBSTRING()
    • LOWER/UPPER()






DateTime Function in SQL Server

Below are the most commonly used DateTime function in SQL Server.
  • GETDATE()
  • DATEADD()
  • DATEPART()
  • DATEDIFF()
  • DATENAME()
  • DAY()
  • MONTH()
  • YEAR()

GETDATE()

GETDATE() is very common used method which returns exact date time from the system. It does not accept any parameter. Just call it like simple function.
Example :

Declare @Date datetime 
set @Date = (SELECT GETDATE());
Print @Date 
OutPut:

Aug 15 2009  9:04PM 

DATEADD()

DATEADD() is used to add or subtract datetime. Its return a new datetime based on the added or subtracted interval.
General Syntax

 DATEADD(datepart, number, date)
datepart is the parameter that specifies on which part of the date to return a new value. Number parameter is used to increment datepart.
Example :

Declare @Date datetime 
set @Date = (SELECT GETDATE());
print  @Date -- Print Current Date
-- Adding 5 days with Current Date
SELECT DATEADD(day, 5,@Date ) AS NewTime
Output :

Aug 15 2009  9:19PM
NewTime
-----------------------
2009-08-20 21:19:15.170

DATEPART()

DATEPART() is used when we need a part of date or time from a datetime variable. We can use DATEPART() method only with select command.
Syntax

DATEPART(datepart, date)
Example :

-- Get Only Year
SELECT DATEPART(year, GETDATE()) AS 'Year'
-- Get Only Month
SELECT DATEPART(month, GETDATE()) AS 'Month'
-- Get Only hour
SELECT DATEPART(hour, GETDATE()) AS 'Hour
Output :

Year
-----------
2009
Month
-----------
8
Hour
-----------
21

DATEDIFF()

DATEDIFF() is very common function to find out the difference between two DateTime elements.
Syntax

DATEDIFF(datepart, startdate, enddate)
Example :

-- Declare Two DateTime Variable
Declare @Date1 datetime 
Declare @Date2 datetime 
-- Set @Date1 with Current Date
set @Date1 = (SELECT GETDATE());
-- Set @Date2 with 5 days more than @Date1
set @Date2 = (SELECT DATEADD(day, 5,@Date1 ))
-- Get The Date Difference
SELECT DATEDIFF(day, @Date1, @Date2) AS DifferenceOfDay
Output :

DifferenceOfDay
---------------
5 

DATENAME()

DATENAME() is very common and most useful function to find out the date name from the datetime value.
Example

-- Get Today 
SELECT DATENAME(dw, getdate()) AS 'Today Is'
-- Get Mont name
SELECT DATENAME(month, getdate()) AS 'Month'
Output :

Today Is
------------------------------
Saturday
Month
------------------------------
August

DAY()

DAY() is used to get the day from any date time object.
Example:

SELECT DAY(getdate()) AS 'DAY'
Output :

DAY
-----------
15

MONTH()


SELECT MONTH(getdate()) AS 'Month'
Output :

Month
-----------
8

YEAR()


SELECT YEAR(getdate()) AS 'Year'
Output :

Year
-----------
2009

String Functions

Some of the String Functions comes very handy at times. Let us discuss them one by one.

ASCII()

Returns the ASCII code value of the leftmost character of a character expression.
Syntax

ASCII ( character_expression ) 

Arguments: character_expression : Is an expression of the type char or varchar.
Return Types: Int 
Example:

SELECT ASCII('A')  

SET TEXTSIZE 0
SET NOCOUNT ON
-- Create the variables for the current character string position 
-- and for the character string.
DECLARE @position int, @string char(15)
-- Initialize the variables.
SET @position = 1
SET @string = 'The codeProject'
WHILE @position <= DATALENGTH(@string)
   BEGIN
   SELECT ASCII(SUBSTRING(@string, @position, 1)),
      CHAR(ASCII(SUBSTRING(@string, @position, 1)))
    SET @position = @position + 1
   END
SET NOCOUNT OFF
Output:

-----------
65
----------- ----
84          T
----------- ----
104         h
----------- ----
101         e
----------- ----
and so on..... 
CHAR()  Converts an int ASCII code to a character.
Syntax  
CHAR ( integer_expression ) 
Arguments: integer_expression: Is an integer from 0 through 255. NULL is returned if the integer expression is not in this range.
Return Types:  character 
Example:
SET TEXTSIZE 0
SET NOCOUNT ON
DECLARE @intCounter int
SET @intCounter = 0

WHILE (@intCounter<= 255)
	BEGIN
		SELECT 'CHAR - ' + CHAR(@intCounter) + '. ASCII - ' + CONVERT(VARCHAR,@intCounter) 
		SET @intCounter = @intCounter + 1
	END


SET NOCOUNT OFF
Output:
CHAR - !. ASCII - 33
------------------------------------------------
CHAR - ". ASCII - 34
------------------------------------------------
CHAR - #. ASCII - 35
------------------------------------------------
CHAR - $. ASCII - 36
------------------------------------------------
CHAR - %. ASCII - 37
------------------------------------------------
CHAR - &. ASCII - 38
------------------------------------------------
CHAR - '. ASCII - 39
------------------------------------------------
CHAR - (. ASCII - 40
------------------------------------------------

and so on.....   

NCHAR() 

Return a unicode character representing a number passed as a parameter.
Syntax 
NCHAR ( integer_expression )  
Return Types:  character 
Example : 
SELECT NCHAR(97) 
OutPut
This will return the leter "a"

DIFFERENCE()

Returns an integer value that indicates the difference between the SOUNDEX values of two character expressions.
Syntax
DIFFERENCE ( character_expression , character_expression )
Arguments:character_expression: Is an expression of type char or varchar. character_expression can also be of type text; however, only the first 8,000 bytes are significant.
Return Types:  Int
Example :
USE AdventureWorks;
GO
-- Returns a DIFFERENCE value of 4, the least possible difference.
SELECT SOUNDEX('Green'), SOUNDEX('Greene'), DIFFERENCE('Green','Greene');
GO
-- Returns a DIFFERENCE value of 0, the highest possible difference.
SELECT SOUNDEX('Blotchet-Halls'), SOUNDEX('Greene'), DIFFERENCE('Blotchet-Halls', 'Greene');
GO
Output:
----- ----- ----------- 
G650  G650  4           

(1 row(s) affected)
                        
----- ----- ----------- 
B432  G650  0           

(1 row(s) affected)

LEFT() 

Returns the left most characters of a string.
Syntax
LEFT(string, length) 
string
Specifies the string from which to obtain the left-most characters.

length
Specifies the number of characters to obtain.
Example :
SELECT LEFT('Marufuzzaman',5)  
OutPut
Maruf

RIGHT()

Returns the right most characters of a string.
Syntax  
RIGHT(string, length) 
string
Specifies the string from which to obtain the left-most characters.

length
Specifies the number of characters to obtain.
Example :
SELECT RIGHT('Md. Marufuzzaman',12)  
OutPut
Marufuzzaman 

LTRIM() 

Returns a character expression after it removes leading blanks.
Example :
SELECT LTRIM('   Md. Marufuzzaman') 
OutPut
Md. Marufuzzaman

RTRIM()

Returns a character string after truncating all trailing blanks.
Example : 
SELECT RTRIM('Md. Marufuzzaman    ') 
OutPut
Md. Marufuzzaman

REPLACE() 

Returns a string with all the instances of a substring replaced by another substring.
Syntax
REPLACE(find, replace, string)
Find
Specifies the string that contains the substring to replace all instances of with another.

Replace
Specifies the substring to locate.

String
Specifies the substring with which to replace the located substring.

Example :
SELECT REPLACE('The codeProject is ?.','?', 'your development resource')
OutPut:
 The codeProject is your development resource.

QUOTNAME()

Returns a Unicode string with the delimiters added to make the input string a valid Microsoft SQL Server delimited identifier.
Syntax
QUOTENAME ( 'character_string' [ , 'quote_character' ] )  
Arguments
' character_string '
Is a string of Unicode character data. character_string is sysname and is limited to 128 characters. Inputs greater than 128 characters return NULL.

' quote_character '
Is a one-character string to use as the delimiter. Can be a single quotation mark ( ' ), a left or right bracket ( [ ] ), or a double quotation mark ( " ). If quote_character is not specified, brackets are used.

Return Types: nvarchar(258)

Examples :
The following example takes the character string abc[]def and uses the [ and ] characters to create a valid SQL Server delimited identifier.

SELECT QUOTENAME('abc[]def')
OutPut:
[abc[]]def] 

REVERSE()

Returns a character expression in reverse order.
Example :
SELECT REVERSE('namazzufuraM .dM')
Output: 
 Md. Marufuzzaman 

CHARINDEX

CharIndex returns the first occurance of a string or characters within another string. The Format of CharIndex is given Below:
CHARINDEX ( expression1 , expression2 [ , start_location ] )
Here expression1 is the string of characters to be found within expression2. So if you want to search ij within the word Abhijit, we will use ij as expression1 and Abhijit as expression2. start_location is an optional integer argument which identifies the position from where the string will be searched. Now let us look into some examples :
SELECT CHARINDEX('SQL', 'Microsoft SQL Server') 
OUTPUT:

11

So it will start from 1 and go on searching until it finds the total string element searched, and returns its first position. The Result will be 0 if the searched string is not found.

We can also mention the Start_Location of the string to be searched.

EXAMPLE:
SELECT CHARINDEX('SQL', 'Microsoft SQL server has a great SQL Engine',12)
So in the above example we can have the Output as 34 as we specified the StartLocation as 12, which is greater than initial SQL position(11).

PATINDEX

As a contrast PatIndex is used to search a pattern within an expression. The Difference between CharIndex and PatIndex is the later allows WildCard Characters.
PATINDEX ( '%pattern%' , expression)
Here the first argument takes a pattern with wildcard characters like '%' (meaning any string) or '_' (meaning any character).

For Example
PATINDEX('%BC%','ABCD')

Output:
2

Another flexibility of PATINDEX is that you can specify a number of characters allowed within the Pattern. Say you want to find all of the records that contain the words "Bread", or "bread" in a string, You can use the following :
SELECT PATINDEX('%[b,B]read%', 'Tommy loves Bread') 
In this example, we mentioned both b and B in square brackets. The Result will be 13 which is same if we have searched in 'Tommy loves bread'.

LEN

Len is a function which returns the length of a string. This is the most common and simplest function that everyone use. Len Function excludes trailing blank spaces.
SELECT LEN('ABHISHEK IS WRITING THIS')
This will output 24, it is same when we write LEN('ABHISHEK IS WRITING THIS ') as LEN doesnt take trailing spaces in count.

STUFF


Stuff is another TSql Function which is used to delete a specified length of characters within a string and replace with another set of characters. The general syntax of STUFF is as below :

STUFF(character_expression1, start, length, character_expression2)Character_Expression1 represents the string in which the stuff is to be applied. start indicates the starting position of the character in character_expression1, length is the length of characters which need to be replaced. character_expression2 is the string that will be replaced to the start position.

Let us take an example :
SELECT STUFF('SQL SERVER is USEFUL',5,6,'DATABASE')

So the result will be :
SQL DATABASE is USEFUL

SUBSTRING


Substring returns the part of the string from a given characterexpression. The general syntax of Substring is as follows :

SUBSTRING(expression, start, length)
Here the function gets the string from start to length. Let us take an example below:
SELECT OUT = SUBSTRING('abcdefgh', 2, 3)
The output will be "bcd".
Note : substring also works on ntext, VARCHAR, CHAR etc.

LOWER / UPPER


Anoter simple but handy function is Lower / UPPER. The will just change case of a string expression. For Example,
SELECT UPPER('this is Lower TEXT') 

Output:
THIS IS LOWER TEXT

MS SQL Server Admin - Queries

Tables and Views

To get all tables, views, and system tables, the following SQL Server system stored procedure can be executed.

exec sp_tables '%'

To filter by database for tables only, for example master:

exec sp_tables '%', '%', 'master', "'TABLE'"

To filter by database and owner / schema for tables only, for example, master and dbo:

exec sp_tables '%', 'dbo', 'master', "'TABLE'"

To return only views, replace "'TABLE'" with "'VIEW'". To return only system tables, replace "'TABLE'" with "'SYSTEM TABLE'".

Schemas / Owners

Here are two examples for queries to get schema / owner information.

select distinct SCHEMA_NAME from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SCHEMATA order by SCHEMA_NAME

select name from dbo.sysusers where islogin = 1 order by name

Procedures

This is a query to get all MS SQL Server procedures.

exec sp_stored_procedures '%'

The query can be filtered to return procedures for specific schemas / owners and databases by appending more information onto the procedure call, such as the following:

exec sp_stored_procedures '%', 'dbo', 'master'

Procedure Columns

This is a system stored procedure call to get the columns in a SQL Server procedure.

exec sp_sproc_columns 'get_employee_names', 'dbo', 'sample'

Functions

This is a query to get all MS SQL Server functions.

select ROUTINE_NAME from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES where upper(ROUTINE_TYPE) = 'FUNCTION'

Triggers

This is a query to get all MS SQL Server triggers.

select * from sysobjects where type = 'TR'

The query can be filtered to return triggers for a specific owner by appending a user_name call onto the where clause to the query.

select * from sysobjects where type = 'TR' and user_name(sysobjects.uid) = 'dbo'

Indexes

This is a query to get MS SQL Server indexes for a particular table. In this example, the table used is employee.

exec sp_helpindex 'employee'

Opps Part 1 : Abstraction

  Abstraction in C# is a fundamental concept of object-oriented programming (OOP) that allows developers t...