Difference between revisions of "DATEPART"
From SQLZOO
| Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
<tr><td align='left'>sqlserver</td><td>Yes</td><td>DATEPART(YEAR, d)</td></tr> | <tr><td align='left'>sqlserver</td><td>Yes</td><td>DATEPART(YEAR, d)</td></tr> | ||
</table> | </table> | ||
| + | |||
<h1>DATEPART</h1> | <h1>DATEPART</h1> | ||
<p>DATEPART allows you to retrieve components of a date.</p> | <p>DATEPART allows you to retrieve components of a date.</p> | ||
| Line 43: | Line 44: | ||
<li>[[%2B(dates) |+ date]]</li> | <li>[[%2B(dates) |+ date]]</li> | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{Languages}} | ||
Latest revision as of 18:51, 21 October 2012
| DATEPART(YEAR, d) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Engine | OK | Alternative |
| ingres | No | EXTRACT(YEAR FROM d) |
| mysql | No | EXTRACT(YEAR FROM d) |
| oracle | No | EXTRACT(YEAR FROM d) |
| postgres | No | EXTRACT(YEAR FROM d) |
| sqlserver | Yes | DATEPART(YEAR, d) |
DATEPART
DATEPART allows you to retrieve components of a date.
You can extract also YEAR, MONTH, DAY, HOUR, MINUTE, SECOND.
DATEPART(YEAR, d) DATEPART(MONTH, d) DATEPART(DAY, d) DATEPART(HOUR, d) DATEPART(MINUTE, d) DATEPART(SECOND, d)
schema:gisq
In this example you get the year and the month from the date whn.
SELECT whn ,DATEPART(YEAR, whn) AS yr ,DATEPART(MONTH, whn) AS mnth FROM eclipse
SELECT whn ,EXTRACT(YEAR FROM td) AS yr ,EXTRACT(MONTH FROM td) AS mnth FROM gisq.eclipse
SELECT whn ,EXTRACT(YEAR FROM td) AS yr ,EXTRACT(MONTH FROM td) AS mnth FROM eclipse
See also
| Language: | English • Deutsch |
|---|