0

I have the following sql statement to find all Mondays dates of the year.

    SELECT DateAdd(week, 
                   o1.v + o0.v, 
                   DateAdd(day, 
                           2 - DatePart(dw, Convert(VARCHAR(4), 2012) + '-01-01'), 
                           Convert(VARCHAR(4), 2012) + '-01-01'
                          )
                  )
      FROM (SELECT  0 AS v UNION 
            SELECT  8 UNION 
            SELECT 16 UNION 
            SELECT 24 UNION 
            SELECT 32 UNION 
            SELECT 40 UNION 
            SELECT 48) AS o1
CROSS JOIN (SELECT 0 AS v UNION 
            SELECT 1 UNION 
            SELECT 2 UNION 
            SELECT 3 UNION 
            SELECT 4 UNION 
            SELECT 5 UNION 
            SELECT 6 UNION 
            SELECT 7) AS o0
     WHERE 2012 = DatePart(year, 
                           DateAdd(week, 
                                   o1.v + o0.v, 
                                   DateAdd(day, 
                                           2 - DatePart(dw, Convert(VARCHAR(4), 2012) + '-01-01'), 
                                           Convert(VARCHAR(4), 2012) + '-01-01')
                                  )
                          )

How can i modify it in order to find all monday dates after the todays date?

4 Answers 4

3

I would create a calendar table rather than write a complex query. Then you can write a clear, simple query like this:

select 
    c.BaseDate
from 
    dbo.Calendar c
where 
    c.DayOfWeek = 'Monday' and
    c.YearNumber = year(getdate()) and
    c.BaseDate > getdate()

As a general rule, a calendar table is the easiest solution for working with dates because it is a lot simpler to query and maintain than functions, and you can add columns whenever you need to support a new date attribute.

1
  • 1
    The best thing about calendar tables is that queries on them can be seen to be correct. Compare this query to one using date arithmetic in either SQL Server or Oracle. A hundred years in a calendar table is only 36k rows, which is practically nothing. Mar 8, 2012 at 11:04
1

there are many functions to help a long with CTE , it will be simple ,below some suggestions , hope it help .

declare @DateFrom Date 
declare @DateTo Date

set @DateFrom ='2016-01-01'
set @DateTo = '2016-12-31'

SELECT AllDates as MonDates from 
(Select DATEADD(d, number, @dateFrom) as AllDates from master..spt_values 
   where type = 'p' and number between 0 and datediff(dd, @dateFrom,   @dateTo)) AS D1    
WHERE DATENAME(dw, D1.AllDates)In('Monday')
0

you can do on the where but I think its quite complicated. A CTE is a good workaround:

with DAYS as (
  SELECT DateAdd(week, o1.v + o0.v, DateAdd(day, 2 - DatePart(dw
,  Convert(VARCHAR(4), 2012) + '-01-01'), Convert(VARCHAR(4)
,  2012) + '-01-01')) as MY_DAY
   FROM (SELECT 0 AS v UNION SELECT 8 UNION SELECT 16 UNION SELECT 24
      UNION SELECT 32 UNION SELECT 40 UNION SELECT 48) AS o1
   CROSS JOIN (SELECT 0 AS v UNION SELECT 1 UNION SELECT 2 UNION SELECT 3
      UNION SELECT 4 UNION SELECT 5 UNION SELECT 6 UNION SELECT 7) AS o0
   WHERE 2012 = DatePart(year, DateAdd(week, o1.v + o0.v, DateAdd(day
,     2 - DatePart(dw, Convert(VARCHAR(4), 2012) + '-01-01')
,     Convert(VARCHAR(4), 2012) + '-01-01')))
)
select MY_DAY from DAYS
where MY_DAY >getdate()
0

I used succesfully this query (i adapted one of the answers here)

SELECT MondaysThisMonth = cast (DATEADD(DAY,n,MondayBeforeFOM) as date)
FROM (
   SELECT FirstOfMonth, MondayBeforeFOM = DATEADD(DAY,DATEDIFF(DAY,0,FirstOfMonth)/7*7,0)
   FROM (SELECT FirstOfMonth = DATEADD(MONTH,DATEDIFF(MONTH,0,GETDATE()),0)) d
) e
CROSS JOIN (SELECT 7 UNION ALL SELECT 14 UNION ALL SELECT 21 UNION ALL SELECT 28 UNION ALL SELECT 35) f (n)
WHERE DATEADD(DAY,n,MondayBeforeFOM) < DATEADD(MONTH,1,FirstOfMonth)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.