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I just want a quick way (and preferably not using a while loop)of createing a table of every date between date @x and date @y so I can left outer join to some stats tables, some of which will have no records for certain days in between, allowing me to mark missing days with a 0

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8 Answers

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Strictly speaking this doesn't exactly answer your question, but its pretty neat.

Assuming you can live with specifying the number of days after the start date, then using a Common Table Expression gives you:

WITH numbers ( n ) AS (
        SELECT 1 UNION ALL
        SELECT 1 + n FROM numbers WHERE n < 500 )
    SELECT DATEADD(day,n-1,'2008/11/01') FROM numbers
    OPTION ( MAXRECURSION 500 )
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You are a genius! Well done, didn't think about using CTE! – digiguru Sep 18 '08 at 19:26
The Option clause does not accept a variable as input, so one must know how many days at the time of writing the code. Otherwise: fun stuff. – David B Sep 18 '08 at 20:11
But the Where clause does, the MAXRECURSION is just a fail over if the loop goes on to far. – digiguru Sep 19 '08 at 11:31
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If you can't use CTEs (like in SQL Server 2000), then you can use what I wrote here musingmarc.blogspot.com/2006/07/… – IDisposable Oct 19 at 19:55
completely awesome! – orip Nov 5 at 12:23
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Just: WHERE col > start-date AND col < end-date

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He's trying to create a table to do a left outer join on. This will not do what he wants to do. – Charles Graham Sep 18 '08 at 18:25
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I believe you're looking for this blog post.

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It's dirty but it does the job – digiguru Sep 18 '08 at 18:26
And it's portable to other SQL engines (including Server 2000). :) – IDisposable Oct 19 at 19:54
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I think that you might as well just do it in a while loop. I know it's ugly, but it's easy and it works.

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I was actually doing something similar a little while back, but I couldn't come up with a way that didn't use a loop.

The best I got was a temp table, and then selecting the dates I wanted to join on into that.

The blog bduke linked to is cute, although I think the temp table solution is perhaps a cleaner solution.

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I've found another table that stores every date (it's visitors to the website), so how about this...

Declare @FromDate datetime,  
    	@ToDate datetime  
Declare @tmpDates table   
    		(StatsDate datetime)
Set @FromDate = DateAdd(day,-30,GetDate())
Set @ToDate = GetDate()

Insert Into  @tmpDates (StatsDate)
Select 
    distinct CAST(FLOOR(CAST(visitDate AS DECIMAL(12, 5))) AS DATETIME)
FROM tbl_visitorstats 
Where visitDate between @FromDate And @ToDate 
Order By CAST(FLOOR(CAST(visitDate AS DECIMAL(12, 5))) AS DATETIME) 


Select * FROM @tmpDates

It does rely on the other table having an entry for every date I want, but it's 98% likely there'll be data for every day.

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vote up -2 vote down

Just write the loop. Someone has to write a loop for this, be it you - or SQL Server.

DECLARE @Dates TABLE
(
  TheDate datetime PRIMARY KEY
)
DECLARE @StartDate datetime, @EndDate datetime
SELECT @StartDate = '2000-01-01', @EndDate = '2010-01-01'


DECLARE @LoopVar int, @LoopEnd int    
SELECT @LoopEnd = DateDiff(dd, @StartDate, @EndDate), @LoopVar = 0


WHILE @LoopVar <= @LoopEnd
BEGIN
  INSERT INTO @Dates (TheDate)
  SELECT DateAdd(dd,@LoopVar,@StartDate)

  SET @LoopVar = @LoopVar + 1
END


SELECT *
FROM @Dates
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People that downvote without commenting... lol. – David B Sep 23 '08 at 19:43
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I would create a Calendar table that just contained every date from a suitable start date until a suitable end date. This wouldn't take up much space in your database and would make these types of query child's play.

select  ...
from    Calendar
        left outer join
        ...
where   Calendar.Date >= @x
and     Calendar.Date <= @y
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