1

Having a following table:

CREATE TABLE `foo`(
  `year` INT NOT NULL,
  `month` INT NOT NULL,
  `day` INT NOT NULL,
  `hour` INT NOT NULL,
  `minute` INT NOT NULL,
  `value` INT NOT NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY(`year`, `month`, `day`, `hour`, `minute`)
);

How to select all the Monday records in SQLite?

2

1 Answer 1

2
  1. convert the date into a format understood by SQLite, which requires padding with zeros to the required four/two digit field width to get YYYY-MM-DD;
  2. then just use strftime('%w') to get the week day:
SELECT *
FROM foo
WHERE strftime('%w',
               substr('000' || year,  -4) || '-' ||
               substr('0'   || month, -2) || '-' ||
               substr('0'   || day,   -2)           ) = '1'
5
  • Nice substr trick for dealing with the zero padding, nicer than the horrendous case length(month) when 1 then '0' || month else month end I was thinking of. Oct 21, 2012 at 18:31
  • Hi. I've finally came back to this task and tried your answer on practice and it doesn't work actually - says "wrong number of arguments to function substr()".
    – Ivan
    Dec 13, 2012 at 11:05
  • Works for me. Is your SQLite older than 3.5.2?
    – CL.
    Dec 13, 2012 at 12:24
  • Indeed it is, thanks again.
    – Ivan
    Dec 13, 2012 at 13:06
  • A curious detail: I've just discovered that strftime returns the day number not as an integer but as a string! As I actually do a bit more logic, I've spent half an hour debugging my query to find out that the result of strftime is always greater than any number (regardless to what does it equal itself) and why %-)
    – Ivan
    Dec 13, 2012 at 15:51

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