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I have varbinary value, I want to extract first 3 bits of 0th byte and value is 0x4D79205465737420537472696E67.

Thank You,

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This extracts 3 bits from the first byte of the varbinary value:

select CONVERT(tinyint,0x7) & SUBSTRING(0x4D79205465737420537472696E67,1,1)

The logic being that on the left hand side of the AND (&), we have a byte with 3 bits set. On the right hand side, we extract a single byte from the varbinary (SUBSTRING is 1 based rather than 0 based, so this is the first byte).

To extract the last 5 bits from the 3rd byte, we'd have:

select CONVERT(tinyint,0xF8) & SUBSTRING(0x4D79205465737420537472696E67,3,1)
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  • Is it possible to do substring on a varbinary? If so, each byte counts as a single char? Jan 10, 2014 at 14:25
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    @GuillermoGutiérrez - I linked to the documentation for it. I wouldn't say each byte counts as a char. Instead, it's explicitly defined in terms of bytes rather than chars: "The values for start and length must be specified in number of characters for ntext, char, or varchar data types and bytes for text, image, binary, or varbinary data types." Jan 10, 2014 at 14:27
  • I was trying UDF as follows: ALTER FUNCTION [dbo].[GetByte] ( BinaryData varbinary(MAX), ByteIndex int, Index int ) RETURNS varchar(50) AS BEGIN --declare BinaryColumn binary(5) --set BinaryColumn = convert(binary,BinaryData) declare Ret varchar(20) select Ret= SUBSTRING(BinaryData, ByteIndex, 1) RETURN Ret END
    – user3180869
    Jan 10, 2014 at 14:41
  • The docco suggests what you've done is right, but trying the second select (5 bits of 3rd byte) returns 0.
    – Neil Moss
    Jan 10, 2014 at 14:46
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    @NeilMoss - that's because I'm a muppet and forgot that I was meant to be specifying the constant in hex rather than decimal. Corrected the constant now (and actually run it). Jan 10, 2014 at 14:48