vote up 1 vote down star

Hello,

I am trying the following query in MS-Access 2007, but it fails on the time field.

INSERT INTO LOG (EMPLOYEECODE,STATUSID,LOCATIONID,TIME,DURATION,SHIFTID,LATECOMING,EARLYGOING,LOGDATE,STATIONID) VALUES(1,1,0,'4/21/2009 2:25:53 PM',0,8,0,1,'1/1/2009',1)

The time field is defined as a datetime.

Without the time field, the query works fine!

I've tried a number of different things, such as enclosing the datetime in hashes, quotes etc. However, the query still fails on the time field.

Any help would be much appreciated!

Thanks!!

flag

2 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

Date & Time input in access use #, since access can't do auto conversion from char/text into date or time in SQL Query (or access call it query), and you better use international standard for inputting date time which was YYYY-MM-DD HH:NN:SS (4-digit year, 2-digit month, 2-digit day, 2-digit hour, 2-digit minute, 2-digit second)

so for 4/21/2009 2:25:53 PM use #2009-04-21 14:25:53#

or if it still fail, you can use #'2009-04-21 14:25:53'#

Edit: Above might be working if you enable ANSI 92 or using ADO/OLEDB as database interface, thanks David for pointing out

I suggest you use YYYY-MM-DD HH:NN:SS format and try it with single quotes (') before use # like i said above

link|flag
FWIW ISO date format within single quotes always works for me. – onedaywhen Apr 21 at 10:39
What database interface are you using? ADO/OLEDB? If so, that would be correct. If you're working within Access, it won't unless you've set your options to use ANSI 92 by default. – David W. Fenton Apr 22 at 3:52
@David: yes usually i use ADO/OLEDB, but it works for me on Access Query too (maybe i've set it using ANSI 92???) – Dels Apr 22 at 4:33
Yes, I (almost) always use OLE DB and always set the Access UI to ANSI-92 Query Mode. – onedaywhen Apr 22 at 10:35
vote up 0 vote down

Thank you guys! That almost got me fully there. I still kept getting the syntax errror for the insert statement, but then on further googling, I realized that TIME might be a reserved keyword, so putting it on box brackets as [TIME] worked!

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.