How would you convert secs to HH:MM:SS format in SQLite?
3 Answers
Try this one:
sqlite> SELECT time(10, 'unixepoch');
00:00:10
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This is what I thought originally but used strftime instead of time– vfclistsApr 21, 2010 at 22:24
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1This is limited to time 24 hours or less. Beyond 24 hours, the resulting value is the time of day from the following day(s). i.e. select time(60*60*24+600,'unixepoch') does not yield 24:10; it yields 00:10 (the next day's 10 minutes). The correct answer is by mivk. Formatted time would be printf('%3d', Seconds / 3600)) || ':' || strftime('%M:%S', Seconds / 86400.0) Mar 15, 2020 at 20:12
If your seconds are more than 24 hours, you need to calculate it yourself. For example, with 100123 seconds, rounding down to minutes:
SELECT (100123/3600) || ' hours, ' || (100123%3600/60) ||' minutes.'
27 hours, 48 minutes
The time
or strftime
functions will obviously convert every 24-hours to another day. So the following shows 3 hours (the time on the next day):
SELECT time(100123, 'unixepoch')
03:48:43
To get the full 27 hours, you can calculate the hours separately, and then use strftime
for the minutes and seconds:
SELECT (100123/3600) || ':' || strftime('%M:%S', 100123/86400.0);
27:48:43
Well, i would do something like this, but i'm getting hours plus 12...
SELECT strftime('%H-%M-%S', CAST(<seconds here> / 86400.0 AS DATETIME))
-- For subtracting the 12 hours difference :S
SELECT strftime('%H-%M-%S', CAST(<seconds here> / 86400.0 AS DATETIME) - 0.5)
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I think it is adjustjing for the start of the epoch. I know it can work, I will work it out.– vfclistsApr 21, 2010 at 19:57
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well, thanks for the nudge !! I thought nobody was going to answer so I dropped it out Apr 21, 2010 at 21:12