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I am trying to post a date to a dateTime column in a SQL Server 2008 R2 database, but I have run into many problems that I don't know what are the causes.

First, I used this code but I got the error:cannot convert string to date.

ADOOF.SQL.Text:='UPDATE OFTab SET CA='''+ CA.Text + ''', demandeClient=''' + DateTimeToStr(demandeClient.DateTime) + ''' WHERE ID='''+ ADOOF.FieldByName('ID') + '''';
ADOOF.ExecSQL;

Second, I have used parameters:

ADOOF.SQL.Text:='UPDATE OFTab SET CA='''+ CA.Text + ''', demandeClient=:demande_client WHERE ID='''+ ADOOF.FieldByName('ID') + '''';
ADOOF.Parameters.ParamByName('demande_client').Value:= demandeClient.Date;
ADOOF.ExecSQL;

But I got the error: Parameter (demande_client) not found.

I googled this problem and I found a suggestion by Embarcadero saying that the parametres sould be created before calling the ADOQuery like this:

ADOOF.SQL.Text:='UPDATE OFTab SET CA='''+ CA.Text + ''', demandeClient=:demande_client WHERE ID='''+ ADOOF.FieldByName('ID') + '''';
ADOOF.Parameters.ParseSQL(ADOOF.SQL.Text, True);    
ADOOF.Parameters.ParamByName('demande_client').Value:= demandeClient.Date;
ADOOF.ExecSQL;

Finely I removed the connection Persist Security Info but always the same problem. Please, any suggestions.

INFO: I am using MICROSOFT OLE DB Provider For SQL Server.

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  • If you want no components, but raw SQL execution, you may take a look at our Open Source classes which are optimized for SQL Server direct access (without any driver or dependency to ADO, DB.pas unit and such). It handles TDateTime parameters directly like Connection.ExecuteNoResult('UPDATE OFTab SET CA=?, demandeClient=? WHERE ID=?',[CA.Text,demandeClient.DateTime,ADOOF.FieldByName('ID')]). Jan 20, 2012 at 12:34

3 Answers 3

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in your first example use

FormatDateTime('YYYYMMDD hhmmss',demandeClient.DateTime)

instead of

DateTimeToStr(demandeClient.DateTime)

This is because DateTimeToStr without formatsettings uses your localized machine settings and your database just might or might not like the format. Using FormatDateTime also gets rid of ambiguities: consider 01/02/03, for some people on the world this is january 2nd 2003 but for others 1st of februari 2003 and even some will say 2001, februari 3rd. YYYYMMDD is universal. 20030201 is always 1st of februari 2003.

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  • I dont use date formating because I dont know the local system nor the server date format. Jan 20, 2012 at 10:41
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    That's why you should always use the YYYYMMDD format when putting dates in a database, it's the ISO standard. You don't have to know any local settings for it to work.
    – Pieter B
    Jan 20, 2012 at 10:47
  • If only using a date, FormatDateTime('YYYYMMDD',TDate) works also.
    – Pieter B
    Jan 20, 2012 at 11:31
  • I believe that the returned value from s: = FormatDateTime should be further transformed via: Format('CONVERT(DATETIME, ''%s'', 112)', [S]) indicating SQL that we use ISO format.
    – kobik
    Jan 20, 2012 at 14:38
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It can depend on how you connect to your DB (drivers).
You can try to explicit that you are using a Date:

ADOOF.Parameters.ParamByName('demande_client').DataType:= ftDateTime;
ADOOF.Parameters.ParamByName('demande_client').AsDateTime:= demandeClient.Date;
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  • 1
    +1 Not sure though if it is necessary to set the DataType when using a specific As... method. Jan 20, 2012 at 8:24
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  1. I will strongly suggest to use SQL Native Client 11 when you are working with SQL Server 2008 R2. New SQL Server 2008 data types (including DATE, TIME, DATETIME2, and DATETIMEOFFSET) are not supported by the SQL Server 2000 OLEDB provider.
  2. Your second code sample should work. Check that you have TADOQuery.ParamCheck = True.
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  • I cant use SQL Native Client beacause this is a network application that connect remotely to Server. For that I am using SQL Server OLEDB provider. Jan 20, 2012 at 8:40
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    Why you cannot ? You have to install SQLNC and specify it in connection string. That will right ...
    – da-soft
    Jan 20, 2012 at 8:42

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