13

How do you perform a LIKE statement on a column of DateTime datatype in SQL Server?

If I run the following SQL it returns me all the dates with 2009 in.

SELECT * FROM MyTable where CheckDate LIKE '%2009%'

However, if I want all the Oct, Nov & Dec dates I'd expect to be able to do the following:

SELECT * FROM MyTable where CheckDate LIKE '%2009-1%'

But this returns me nothing!

I'm giving the user a filter option where they type in the date string and as they type I filter the data. So if they type '20', I'd like to return all the dates with '20' within the date (so this could be all 2012 dates or a date value like 06/20/1999)

Can anybody help?

I'm using SQL Server 2008.

Thanks in advance.

2
  • Thanks for your reply, I've updated the job with more detail about what I'm trying to do
    – Sun
    Aug 16, 2012 at 10:54
  • Have you checked that your users want such a facility? I've never once wanted to find "all activity that happened on day 10 of any month, or in october, or in 2010". Aug 16, 2012 at 10:55

3 Answers 3

22

You can use the DATEPART function to extract portions of dates. It should also make your queries more explicit about what you're seeking to achieve:

SELECT * FROM MyTable
where DATEPART(year,CheckDate)=2009 and
      DATEPART(month,CheckDate) between 10 and 12

(There are also specifically named functions, such as MONTH and YEAR, but I prefer DATEPART for consistency since it can access all components of a datetime)

You should try to avoid thinking of datetimes as having any kind of string format. Treating them as strings is one of the largest sources of errors we encounter.

10

If you need to use Like operator (for some reason) you have to convert the DateTime column into a varchar.

SELECT * 
FROM MyTable 
WHERE CONVERT(VARCHAR, CheckDate, 120) LIKE '%2009-1%'
5

You can use something like this:

SELECT * 
FROM MyTable 
WHERE CheckDate >= '2009-10-01' AND CheckDate < '2010-01-01';
4
  • 1
    And while you're at it - try to use a language independent date format - like 20091001 - that works for all language versions of SQL Server ....
    – marc_s
    Aug 16, 2012 at 10:51
  • 3
    Dangerous. Whereas the original query forced a conversion of a datetime to a string (and so will always produce a consistently formatted value), this forces conversions from string to datetime, and depending on regional settings, may in fact be querying for anything on or after 10th January 2009 Aug 16, 2012 at 10:53
  • @Damien_The_Unbeliever Isn't YYYY-MM-DD correct according to ISO 8601?
    – Magnus
    Oct 11, 2021 at 7:32
  • @Magnus - yes, it is. That doesn't necessarily mean that SQL Server interpreted such strings as ISO 8601. Certainly on older versions, and converting to datetime rather than datetime2, whether it interpreted it as YYYY-MM-DD or YYYY-DD-MM depended on regional settings. The only safe unambiguous date literal (without time) on those versions was YYYYMMDD, with no separators. Oct 11, 2021 at 7:34

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