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Given two date ranges, what is the simplest or most efficient way to determine whether the two date ranges overlap?

As an example, suppose we have ranges denoted by DateTime variables StartDate1 to EndDate1 and StartDate2 to EndDate2.

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1  
Define "overlap". – Tomalak Nov 28 '08 at 14:52
2  
Extremely similar to stackoverflow.com/questions/306316/… – Charles Bretana Nov 28 '08 at 14:54
@CharlesBretana thanks for that, you're right - that's almost like a two-dimensional version of my question! – Ian Nelson Nov 28 '08 at 14:57
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very similar to stackoverflow.com/questions/117962/… – Steven A. Lowe Nov 28 '08 at 16:35
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10 Answers

up vote 111 down vote accepted

Let CondA Mean DateRange A Completely After DateRange B (True if StartA > EndB)

Let CondB Mean DateRange A Completely Before DateRange B (True if EndA < StartB)

Then Overlap exists if Neither A Nor B is true ( If one range is neither completely after the other, nor completely before the other, then they must overlap)

Now deMorgan's law, I think it is, says that

Not (A Or B) <=> Not A And Not B

Which means (StartA <= EndB) And (EndA >= StartB)

NOTE: This includes conditions where the edges overlap exactly. If you wish to exclude that, change the >= operators to >, and <= to <

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5  
Excellent rigorous explanation. Thanks. – Ian Nelson Nov 28 '08 at 15:04
Edited to fix typo... Mixed up As and Bs ! – Charles Bretana Nov 28 '08 at 15:05
Thank you! Its much easier to indicate what NOT to accept versus what to accept. – Soviut Apr 8 '09 at 18:39
Thank you, that's the best explanation I've found. – EMP Sep 22 '09 at 6:43
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I believe that it is sufficient to say that the two ranges overlap if:

(StartDate1 <= EndDate2) and (StartDate2 <= EndDate1)
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For reasoning about temporal relations (or any other interval relations, come to that), consider Allen's Interval Algebra. It describes the 13 possible relations that two intervals can have with respect to each other. You can find other references - "Allen's Interval" seem to be the operative search terms. You can also find information about these operations in Snodgrass's "Developing Time-Oriented Applications in SQL" (PDF available online at URL), and in Date, Darwen and Lorentzos "Temporal Data and the Relational Model" (see Amazon.com, etc).


Emtucifor comments:

You can only get 13 if you count things funny... I can get "15 possible relations that two intervals can have" when I go crazy with it. By sensible counting, I get only six, and if you throw out caring whether A or B comes first, I get only three (no intersect, partially intersect, one wholly within other). 15 goes like this: [before:before, start, within, end, after], [start:start, within, end, after],[within:within, end, after], [end:end, after], [after:after].

I think that you cannot count the two entries 'before:before' and 'after:after'. I could see 7 entries if you equate some relations with their inverses (see the diagram in the referenced Wikipedia URL; it has 7 entries, 6 of which have a different inverse, with equals not having a distinct inverse). And whether three is sensible depends on your requirements.

----------------------|-------A-------|----------------------
    |----B1----|
           |----B2----|
               |----B3----|
               |----------B4----------|
               |----------------B5----------------|
                      |----B6----|
----------------------|-------A-------|----------------------
                      |------B7-------|
                      |----------B8-----------|
                         |----B9----|
                         |----B10-----|
                         |--------B11--------|
                                      |----B12----|
                                         |----B13----|
----------------------|-------A-------|----------------------
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You can only get 13 if you count things funny... I can get "15 possible relations that two intervals can have" when I go crazy with it. By sensible counting, I get only six, and if you throw out caring whether A or B comes first, I get only three (no intersect, partially intersect, one wholly within other). 15 goes like this: [before:before, start, within, end, after], [start:start, within, end, after],[within:within, end, after], [end:end, after], [after:after]. – ErikE Mar 9 '10 at 1:18
@Emtucifor: I think that you cannot count the two entries 'before:before' and 'after:after'. – Jonathan Leffler Mar 9 '10 at 2:37
Re your update: B1 to A is before:before and B13 to A is after:after. Your nice diagram is missing start:start between B5 B6, and end:end between B11 and B12. If being on an endpoint is significant, then you have to count it, so the final tally is 15, not 13. I don't think the endpoint thing is significant, so I personally count it [before: before, within, after], [within: within, after], [after:after] which comes to 6. I think the whole endpoint thing is just confusion about whether the bounds are inclusive or exclusive. The exclusiveness of the endpoints don't change the core relations! – ErikE Mar 10 '10 at 20:38
That is, in my scheme the these are equivalent: (B2, B3, B4), (B6, B7, B9, B10), (B8, B11, B12). I realize that B7 implies the information that the two ranges exactly coincide. But I'm not convinced this additional information should be part of the base intersection relations. For example, when two intervals are the exact same length even if not coincident or even overlapping, should that be considered another "relation"? I say no, and seeing as this additional aspect is the only thing making B7 distinct from B6, then I think having endpoints-as-separate-cases makes things inconsistent. – ErikE Mar 10 '10 at 20:51
@Emtucifor: OK - I see why I misidentified 'before:before' and 'after:after' as the entries; however, I cannot picture what the 'start:start' and 'end:end' entries should look like. Since you can't edit my diagram, can you email me (see my profile) with a modified copy of the diagram showing the 'start:start' and 'end:end' relationships? I have no major issues with your groupings. – Jonathan Leffler Mar 10 '10 at 21:07
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I woud do

StartDate1.IsBetween(StartDate2, EndDate2) || EndDate1.IsBetween(StartDate2, EndDate2)

Where IsBetween is something like

	public static bool IsBetween(this DateTime value, DateTime left, DateTime right) {
		return (value > left && value < right) || (value < left && value > right);
	}
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I would prefer (left < value && value < right) || (right < value && value < left) for this method. – Patrick Huizinga Nov 28 '08 at 15:22
Thanks for this. Makes things easier in my head. – sshow Nov 10 '09 at 15:05
Why would you check four conditions when you only have to check two? Fail. – ErikE Mar 9 '10 at 1:19
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Ah, my apologies, I see now that you are allowing the ranges to be in reverse order (StartDateX > EndDateX). Strange. Anyway, what if StartDate1 is less than StartDate2 and EndDate1 is greater than EndDate2? The code you gave will not detect this overlapping condition. – ErikE Mar 11 '10 at 5:17
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All the solutions that check a multitude of conditions based on where the ranges are in relation to one another can be greatly simplified by just ensuring that a specific range starts earlier! You ensure that the first range starts earlier (or at the same time) by swapping the ranges if necessary up front.

Then, you can detect overlap if the other range start is less than or equal to the first range end (if ranges are inclusive, containing both the start and end times) or less than (if ranges are inclusive of start and exclusive of end).

Assuming inclusive at both ends, there's only four possibilities of which one is a non-overlap:

|----------------------|        range 1
|--->                           range 2 overlap
 |--->                          range 2 overlap
                       |--->    range 2 overlap
                        |--->   range 2 no overlap

The endpoint of the range 2 doesn't enter into it. So, in pseudo-code:

def doesOverlap (r1,r2):
    if r1.s > r2.s:
        swap r1, r2
    if r2.s > r1.e:
        return false
    return true

If the ranges are inclusive at the start and exclusive at the end, you just have to replace > with >= in the second if statement:

|----------------------|        range 1
|--->                           range 2 overlap
 |--->                          range 2 overlap
                       |--->    range 2 no overlap
                        |--->   range 2 no overlap

You greatly limit the number of checks you have to make because you remove half of the problem space early by ensuring range 1 never starts after range 2.

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+1 for mentioning the inclusive/exclusive problem. I was going to whip up an answer myself when I had time, but no need now. The thing is you almost never allow both the start and end to be inclusive simultaneously. In my industry it is common practice to treat the start as exlusive and the end as inclusive, but either way is fine as long as you stay consistent. This is the first completely correct answer on this question so far...IMO. – Brian Gideon Aug 6 '10 at 3:50
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Here is a generic method that can be usefull locally.

    // Takes a list and returns all records that have overlapping time ranges.
    public static IEnumerable<T> GetOverlappedTimes<T>(IEnumerable<T> list, Func<T, bool> filter, Func<T,DateTime> start, Func<T, DateTime> end)
    {
        // Selects all records that match filter() on left side and returns all records on right side that overlap.
        var overlap = from t1 in list
                      where filter(t1)
                      from t2 in list
                      where !object.Equals(t1, t2) // Don't match the same record on right side.
                      let in1 = start(t1)
                      let out1 = end(t1)
                      let in2 = start(t2)
                      let out2 = end(t2)
                      where in1 <= out2 && out1 >= in2
                      let totover = GetMins(in1, out1, in2, out2)
                      select t2;

        return overlap;
    }

    public static void TestOverlap()
    {
        var tl1 = new TempTimeEntry() { ID = 1, Name = "Bill", In = "1/1/08 1:00pm".ToDate(), Out = "1/1/08 4:00pm".ToDate() };
        var tl2 = new TempTimeEntry() { ID = 2, Name = "John", In = "1/1/08 5:00pm".ToDate(), Out = "1/1/08 6:00pm".ToDate() };
        var tl3 = new TempTimeEntry() { ID = 3, Name = "Lisa", In = "1/1/08 7:00pm".ToDate(), Out = "1/1/08 9:00pm".ToDate() };
        var tl4 = new TempTimeEntry() { ID = 4, Name = "Joe", In = "1/1/08 3:00pm".ToDate(), Out = "1/1/08 8:00pm".ToDate() };
        var tl5 = new TempTimeEntry() { ID = 1, Name = "Bill", In = "1/1/08 8:01pm".ToDate(), Out = "1/1/08 8:00pm".ToDate() };
        var list = new List<TempTimeEntry>() { tl1, tl2, tl3, tl4, tl5 };
        var overlap = GetOverlappedTimes(list, (TempTimeEntry t1)=>t1.ID==1, (TempTimeEntry tIn) => tIn.In, (TempTimeEntry tOut) => tOut.Out);

        Console.WriteLine("\nRecords overlap:");
        foreach (var tl in overlap)
            Console.WriteLine("Name:{0} T1In:{1} T1Out:{2}", tl.Name, tl.In, tl.Out);
        Console.WriteLine("Done");

        /*  Output:
            Records overlap:
            Name:Joe T1In:1/1/2008 3:00:00 PM T1Out:1/1/2008 8:00:00 PM
            Name:Lisa T1In:1/1/2008 7:00:00 PM T1Out:1/1/2008 9:00:00 PM
            Done
         */
    }
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The easiest way to do it in my opinion would be to compare if either EndDate1 is before StartDate2 or EndDate2 is before StartDate1.

That of course if you are considering intervals in the future and not the past ( StartDate always before EndDate)

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I am afraid I have not found a satisfying algorithm that can solve all conditions. Here is the brute force way, it is limited only by the available list of dates kept in a table. Sadly, will also eats disk I/O like hell.


    declare
        @StartDate date,
        @EndDate date

    select
        @StartDate = '1900-01-01',
        @EndDate = '2049-12-31'

    create table Numbers
    (
        Id int identity (1, 1),
        Date date primary key
    )

    ;
    with 
    DateList as -- list of dates
    (
        select @StartDate as Date 
        union all 
        select dateadd(d, 1, Date) from DateList where datediff(d, Date, @EndDate) > 0
    )
    insert
        Numbers
    (
        Date
    )
    select 
        Date 
    from 
        DateList 
    option (maxrecursion 0)

Here is the function that make use of the above table.


alter function FnOverlaps
(
    @StartDateA datetime,
    @EndDateA datetime,
    @StartDateB datetime,
    @EndDateB datetime
)
returns bit
as 
begin
    declare 
        @RetVal bit

    ;
    with 
    ins as
    (
        select Date from Numbers where Date between @StartDateA and @EndDateA
        intersect
        select Date from Numbers where Date between @StartDateB and @EndDateB
    )
    select @RetVal = case when count(*) = 0 then 0 else 1 end from ins
    return @RetVal
end
go

-- test here
select dbo.FnOverlaps('2005-01-01', '2005-12-31', '2004-01-01', '2004-01-31')
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BETWEEN expands to two conditions, so you're using two when you only need four (see most-highly voted answer in this question). – ErikE Mar 9 '10 at 1:20
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This article (including pictures) describes the relation of two time periods by the enumeration PeriodRelation:

// ------------------------------------------------------------------------
public enum PeriodRelation
{
    After,
    StartTouching,
    StartInside,
    InsideStartTouching,
    EnclosingStartTouching,
    Enclosing,
    EnclosingEndTouching,
    ExactMatch,
    Inside,
    InsideEndTouching,
    EndInside,
    EndTouching,
    Before,
} // enum PeriodRelation
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if (StartDate1 > StartDate2) swap(StartDate, EndDate);

(StartDate1 <= EndDate2) and (StartDate2 <= EndDate1);
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