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This is not asking how to convert an arbitrary string to datetime in MSSQL such as this question.

I can control the string format but I want to know what the MSSQL syntax is for updating a datetime field using a date string.

2 Answers 2

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UPDATE MyTable SET MyDate = CONVERT(datetime, '2009/07/16 08:28:01', 120)

For a full discussion of CAST and CONVERT, including the different date formatting options, see the MSDN Library Link below:

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/functions/cast-and-convert-transact-sql

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For instance you can use

update tablename set datetimefield='19980223 14:23:05'
update tablename set datetimefield='02/23/1998 14:23:05'
update tablename set datetimefield='1998-12-23 14:23:05'
update tablename set datetimefield='23 February 1998 14:23:05'
update tablename set datetimefield='1998-02-23T14:23:05'

You need to be careful of day/month order since this will be language dependent when the year is not specified first. If you specify the year first then there is no problem; date order will always be year-month-day.

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    -1. Year first does not guarantee y-m-d. SET LANGUAGE british GO SELECT CAST('2009-02-28' AS datetime), CAST('2009-02-28 01:02:03' AS datetime) --both fail
    – gbn
    Commented Jul 16, 2009 at 7:37
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    You have to use "date" and SQL Server 2008 before yyyy-mm-dd works.
    – gbn
    Commented Jul 16, 2009 at 7:39
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    Please be careful cutting and pasting. Tibor specifically refers to the new date types only for reliable ymd parsing
    – gbn
    Commented Jul 16, 2009 at 7:41
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    gbn - the example syntax does work regardless of language setting. The syntax you use was not part of the answer. A link is also provided with advice to read the full discussion. Quote: End result is that these new types are language neutral for a separated datetime literal as long as the year comes first. If that is the case, then the string will be interpreted as year first, then month and finally day - regardless of DATEFORMAT or language setting.
    – NeilG
    Commented Jul 17, 2009 at 1:36
  • gbn- thanks for correcting my use of 'MSSQL' instead of 'SQL Server'. I know now for future use.
    – NeilG
    Commented Jul 17, 2009 at 1:38

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