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I'm working on a purging procedure on SQL Server 2005 which has to delete all rows in a table older than 1 year ago + time passed in the current year.

Ex: If I execute the procedure today 6-10-2009 it has to delete rows older than 2008-01-01 00:00 (that is 2007 included and backwards).

How can I get the date of the first second of the year?

I've tried this:

select cast((DATEPART(year, getdate()) -1 )AS DATETIME);

but I get 1905-07-02 00:00:00.000 and not 2008-01-01 00:00 (as I wrongly expected).

Can someone help me, please?

3 Answers 3

11

EDIT: This was returning current year, when the question was for previous year. Code has been corrected to reflect this.

use this

select DATEADD(yy, DATEADD(yy, DATEDIFF(yy,0,getdate()), 0), -1)

OR to use your variable:

select DATEADD(yy, DATEADD(yy, DATEDIFF(yy,0,@YourDateTimeValue), 0), -1)
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5

This will work:

select cast('01 jan' + CAST((DATEPART(year, getdate())-1) as varchar) AS DATETIME);

(I know it's not the "best" solution and probably involves more casts than necessary, but it works, and for how this will be used it seems to be a pragmatic solution!)

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  • Hmm.. Interesting how the other answer to this question (at the time of writing) has 8 upvotes, whilst mine has only 1 up and 1 down vote, yet mine is the only solution that gives the correct answer. (ie. For today's date (6 Oct 2009) the result is 2008-01-01 00:00:00, whilst Raj's solution returns 2009-01-01 00:00:00)
    – CraigTP
    Oct 6, 2009 at 17:23
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    I like SELECT CONVERT(DATETIME,CAST(YEAR(GETDATE())-1 AS VARCHAR) + '0101',112) or SELECT CONVERT(DATETIME,CAST(YEAR(GETDATE())-1 AS VARCHAR),112) more, because it specifies input format.
    – LukLed
    Oct 6, 2009 at 17:50
  • @CraigTP: I upvoted you myself because you had the right answer. I have changed mine to reflect the correction
    – Raj More
    Oct 7, 2009 at 13:08
  • @Raj - Thanks. I do prefer the DateAdd/DateDiff method that your solution uses, although I was amazed at the upvoters who clearly didn't run your original SQL or check the result!
    – CraigTP
    Oct 7, 2009 at 13:40
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SELECT DATEADD(year, DATEDIFF(year, 365, GETDATE()), 0)
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  • 1
    SELECT DATEADD(year, DATEDIFF(year, 365, GETDATE()), 0) Not work with leap year:(
    – user874093
    Aug 2, 2011 at 7:32

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