Every record in my SQLite
database contains a field which contains a Date
stored as a string
in the format 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss'
.
Is it possible to query the database to get the record which contains the most recent date please?
Every record in my SQLite
database contains a field which contains a Date
stored as a string
in the format 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss'
.
Is it possible to query the database to get the record which contains the most recent date please?
you can do it like this
SELECT * FROM Table ORDER BY date(dateColumn) DESC Limit 1
datetime()
intead of date()
For me I had my query this way to solve my problem
select * from Table order by datetime(datetimeColumn) DESC LIMIT 1
Since I was storing it as datetime not date column
When you sure the format of text field is yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss
(ex.: 2017-01-02 16:02:55
), So It works for me simply:
SELECT * FROM Table ORDER BY dateColumn DESC Limit 1
Without any extra date function!
You need to convert it to unix timestamp, and then compare them:
SELECT * FROM data ORDER BY strftime('%s', date_column) DESC
But this can be pretty slow, if there are lots of rows. Better approach would be to store unix timestamp by default, and create an index for that column.
You can convert your column sent_date_time
to yyyy-MM-dd
format and then order by date:
1) substr(sent_date_time,7,4)||"-"||substr(sent_date_time,1,2)||"-"||substr(sent_date_time,4,2) as date
2) order by date desc
In my case everything works fine without casting column to type 'date'. Just by specifying column name with double quotes like that:
SELECT * FROM 'Repair' ORDER BY "Date" DESC;
I think SQLite makes casting by itself or something like that, but when I tried to 'cast' Date column by myself it's not worked. And there was no error messages.
Dat
column it's still sort it after newer date like this i.ibb.co/Qv1zKQC/sqlitedatetime.png
You can also use the following query
"SELECT * FROM Table ORDER BY strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'," + dateColumn + ") DESC Limit 1"
I found this ugly hack worked.
select *, substr(date_col_name,7,4)as yy, substr(date_col_name,4,2) as mm, substr(date_col_name,1,2) as dd from my_table order by yy desc,mm desc,dd desc
it would be better to convert the text column to date field type, but I found that did not work reliably for me.
If you do a lot of date sorting/comparison, you may get better results by storing time as ticks rather than strings, here is showing how to get 'now' in ticks with:
((strftime('%s', 'now') - strftime('%S', 'now') + strftime('%f', 'now')) * 1000)
(see https://stackoverflow.com/a/20478329/460084)
Then it's easy to sort, compare, etc ...
NOW
instead of the stored value, so that's not terribly helpful... 3) There appear to be better conversions (like the accepted answer), negating the need for the manual conversion. What benefit does your answer provide over any of the others?
Commented
Nov 27, 2018 at 23:13
This will work for both date and time
SELECT *
FROM Table
ORDER BY
julianday(dateColumn)
DESC Limit 1