My input to the stored procedure is a string (e.g '2 years 3 months 4 days') which is a future date. How to convert this to a date by comparing with current date?
4 Answers
declare @S varchar(50)
set @S = '2 years 3 months 4 days'
select dateadd(day, D.D, dateadd(month, D.M, dateadd(year, D.Y, getdate()))) as TheDate
from (select replace(replace(replace(@S, ' years ', '.'), ' months ', '.'), ' days', '')) as T(S)
cross apply (
select cast(parsename(T.S, 1) as int),
cast(parsename(T.S, 2) as int),
cast(parsename(T.S, 3) as int)Y
) as D(D, M, Y)
You can use below Query in SP
select dateadd(yy,2,dateadd(m,3,dateadd(d,4,GETDATE())))
^Year ^Month ^Days
Here is the SP
create procedure test1
(
@year INT,
@month INT,
@day INT
)
AS
BEGIN
select dateadd(yy,@year,dateadd(m,@month,dateadd(d,@day,GETDATE())))
END
Use DATEADD
, for example (add one year, to the current data):
DECLARE @datetime2 datetime2 = getdate();
SELECT 'year', DATEADD(year,1,@datetime2)
...
So, you should add 2 years, 3 months and 4 days to the current date and then return it as normal date (here I returned future year). Read here for details.
Before of the stored procedure invocation you should split the string in a server side language like PHP:
$str = '2 years 3 months 4 days';
preg_match_all('!\d+!', $str, $data);
So $data[0]=2, $data[1]=3
and $data[2] = 4
, and so you can invoke @Luv procedure:
create procedure test1 -- thanks to Luv
(
@year INT,
@month INT,
@day INT
)
AS
BEGIN
select dateadd(yy,@year,dateadd(m,@month,dateadd(d,@day,GETDATE())))
END
-
this wont solve his problem at all - he has some weird "readable time" formatting, using that as input is ... tricky. Sep 28, 2013 at 13:44
-
but my input to the parameter is '1 years 1 months 1 days' which is approximately 10/29/2014 (MM/DD/YYYY) from the current date. I need this date to be calculated. Sep 28, 2013 at 13:49
-
Do this using DATEADD on the current date is simple as in the example.– BAD_SEEDSep 28, 2013 at 13:51
https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/date-and-time-functions.html Convert seconds to human readable time duration
you may be able to split & convert this formatting into something which is useable via builtin SQL-functions - but i'd recommend using at least a pre-processing scriptlanguage like PHP in order to format the time correctly, PHP "relative" formats may just be the thing, i recall the datetime-class being quite powerful ...
http://www.php.net/manual/en/datetime.construct.php
http://www.php.net/manual/en/datetime.formats.relative.php
http://www.php.net/manual/en/datetime.formats.compound.php
-
-
that doesnt make any sense at all - "comes before" is ... just weirdly absurd. Sep 28, 2013 at 19:44