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We have number pairs like 810 1015 that mean the hour and minute. We have to calculate the minute difference of the pair. The example above would give 125 (minutes).

What solution would you give? I thought about converting to string and substringing then concatenating, but can't know if it is 3 or 4 long and using IF ELSE but would be too complicated (if no other solution exist I am left with this). Also thought about somehow converting to base 60 and subtracting, but also too complicated.

Thanks in advance.

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  • 1
    Is 3 digits the minimum length or you could have 85 for 8:05 AM? Because in the latter case you'd have a problem, since 125 could stand for both 1:25 and 12:05 Mar 9, 2017 at 12:18
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    Couldn't you just lpad with zeros to make it's length 4 in any case? And then do whatever you're planning to do with it.
    – PKey
    Mar 9, 2017 at 12:34
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    Question is not if 3 digits is the minimum length, but if last two digits ALWAYS represent minutes. So, in case of, say, 105 - is it 10:05, or 1:05? Edit And how do you represent 00:20? Mar 9, 2017 at 13:32
  • 125 minutes. That would be the result of the conversion and subtraction. The last two digits always represents minutes. Thanks guys.
    – Najib
    Mar 9, 2017 at 16:33

4 Answers 4

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Edit: This solution is based on Plirkee's comment to lpad numbers to get 4-character strings, and on Stefano Zanini's solution modified to allow for 0 hour, and 24-hour format.

If last two digits always represent minutes, and if hours are always in 24-hour format:

with t(time1, time2) as (
  select 810, 1015 from dual union all
  select 20, 1530 from dual
),
conv(time1, time2) as (
  select lpad(to_char(time1), 4, '0'),
         lpad(to_char(time2), 4, '0')
    from t
)
select time1,
       time2,
       24 * 60 * (to_date(time2, 'HH24MI') - to_date(time1, 'HH24MI')) diff_minutes
  from conv;
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  • Thanks! lpad was the missing piece.
    – Najib
    Mar 9, 2017 at 16:34
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How about storing the data as a DATA datetype, using an standard date portion, such as 01-10-2000. So you data would be

    01-01-2000 8:10:00
    01-01-2000 10:15:00
etc

Then you can just do simple date math :)

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  • Hi! We get the database ready, full of records, so task is to change it, and have to convert it to date (the way you imagined it).
    – Najib
    Mar 11, 2017 at 10:15
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Assuming 3 digits is the minimum length of your numbers (otherwise you'd have ambiguous cases), this following query should do the trick

select  (to_date(substr(t2, 1, length(t2)-2) || ':' || substr(t2, length(t2)-1, length(t2)), 'HH:MI') -
        to_date(substr(t1, 1, length(t1)-2) || ':' || substr(t1, length(t1)-1, length(t1)), 'HH:MI')) * 24 * 60 cc
from    (select 810 t1, 1015 t2 from dual)

The steps are:

  1. explode the numbers in two parts each: last two digits as the minutes and the remaining digits as the hour
  2. concatenate the two parts with a separator (in this example ':')
  3. convert that concatenations into dates
  4. multiply the difference between the two dates (which is in days) by 24 to get hours and by 60 to get minutes
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Just an another tweak which can be used. Hope this helps.

SELECT 
TO_CHAR(TO_DATE(LPAD(LPAD('1015',4,'0') - LPAD('810',4,'0'),4,'0'),'HH24MI'),'HH24')*60
+TO_CHAR(TO_DATE(lpad(lpad('1015',4,'0') - lpad('810',4,'0'),4,'0'),'HH24MI'),'MI') MINUTES
FROM dual;

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