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I am using SQL Server 2008 R2, and I've selected the option to export the data from a table into a SQL INSERT script using 'Script data as' -> 'INSERT with column names'. This has resulted in a script similar to the following:

INSERT INTO [MyTable] ([Id],[InsertDateTime],[Firstname],[Email]) VALUES (1, '26/06/2012 2:02:25 p.m.', 'Robert', '[email protected]');
INSERT INTO [MyTable] ([Id],[InsertDateTime],[Firstname],[Email]) VALUES (2, '28/06/2012 4:17:21 a.m.', 'David', '[email protected]');

If I then immediately try to run this generated script on an empty version of the table, I get the following error:

Conversion failed when converting date and/or time from character string.

2 Questions:

  1. The date/time string is in the format 'dd/mm/yyyy h:mm:ss'. How do I tell SQL server the specific format that I want to convert the string representation of the date/time from? The script generates about 5000 INSERT lines, so I can do a find and replace where it's reasonable to do so...
  2. Why would SQL Server even generate a script that it cannot run?

Thanks!

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1 Answer 1

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First use set dateformat to set proper date parts order. In your case "dmy". Then replace all "a.m." to "AM" and "p.m" to "PM" in all your statements. Following script works fine:

 set dateformat dmy

 INSERT INTO [MyTable] ([Id],[InsertDateTime],[Firstname],[Email]) 
   VALUES (1, '26/06/2012 2:02:25 PM', 'Robert', '[email protected]');
 INSERT INTO [MyTable] ([Id],[InsertDateTime],[Firstname],[Email]) 
     VALUES (2, '28/06/2012 4:17:21 AM', 'David', '[email protected]');
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  • If "a.m." and "p.m." are not recognised by SQL Server, why would one of SSMS's own built in scripts generate a date format that cannot be recognised?
    – Nanite
    Aug 24, 2012 at 0:21

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