13

i need to find the difference between the time in the format hh:mm:ss

select msglog.id,max(msglog.timestamp) enddate,
   min(msglog.timestamp) startdate,
   enddate - startdate
   from MESSAGELOG msglog
   group by id

In the abovequery msglog.timestamp is of type DATE.

How can I get the elapsed time or diff between the time in the correct format in oracle?

3 Answers 3

24

When you subtract two DATE values like enddate - startdate you get the difference in days with decimal accuracy, so for example 1.5 would mean 1 1/2 days or 36 hours. You can convert that to HH:MI:SS using a lot of math, but an easier way is to convert the decimal value to an INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND value using the NUMTODSINTERVAL function:

  NUMTODSINTERVAL(enddate - startdate, 'DAY')

You'd think the TO_CHAR function would be able to format this as HH:MI:SS, but it doesn't seem to work that way. You can use EXTRACT instead, and TO_CHAR to make sure you get leading zeros:

 TO_CHAR(EXTRACT(HOUR FROM NUMTODSINTERVAL(enddate-startdate, 'DAY')), 'FM00')
   || ':' ||
 TO_CHAR(EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM NUMTODSINTERVAL(enddate-startdate, 'DAY')), 'FM00')
   || ':' ||
 TO_CHAR(EXTRACT(SECOND FROM NUMTODSINTERVAL(enddate-startdate, 'DAY')), 'FM00')

The 00 part of the format code specifies two digits, with a leading zero if needed. The FM part gets rid of the leading space in the formatted result, which is reserved for a negative sign if needed.

Also note that your query gets aggregate values and uses them in the same SELECT list. Oracle won't let you do this. Try something like this instead:

WITH StartEndByID AS (
  SELECT
    msglog.id,
    NUMTODSINTERVAL(max(msglog.timestamp) - min(msglog.timestamp), 'DAY') elapsed
  FROM messagelog msglog
  GROUP BY id
)
SELECT
  id,
  TO_CHAR(EXTRACT(HOUR FROM elapsed), 'FM00') || ':' ||
    TO_CHAR(EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM elapsed), 'FM00') || ':' ||
    TO_CHAR(EXTRACT(SECOND FROM elapsed), 'FM00') AS ElapsedHHMISS
FROM StartEndByID
5
  • I like this better than my answer, +1.
    – GriffeyDog
    Jan 13, 2014 at 17:20
  • Hi Ed, just curious to know whether NUMTODSINTERVAL works for timestamp intervals?
    – San
    Jan 13, 2014 at 17:27
  • @San - the result of timestamp arithmetic is an interval anyway, so you don't need to convert it to one.
    – Alex Poole
    Jan 13, 2014 at 17:28
  • 1
    If you subtract a TIMESTAMP from a TIMESTAMP or a TIMESTAMP from a DATE Oracle will give you an INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND result. You don't need to convert. It's only necessary when subtracting a DATE from a DATE.
    – Ed Gibbs
    Jan 13, 2014 at 17:29
  • Thanks Ed and Alex for explanation.. Alex my question was if both end_date and start_date have TIMESTAMP datatype. Sorry I forgot to mentioned that in last comment... Thanks
    – San
    Jan 13, 2014 at 17:46
20

Date arithmetic in Oracle results in a number expressed in days. So, to convert to hours, you would multiply by 24 and then trunc to get an integral number:

trunc(24 * (enddate - startdate))

To get minutes, convert the days value to minutes and mod() that with 60:

mod(trunc(24 * 60 * (enddate - startdate)), 60)

For seconds, again convert days to seconds and mod() that with 60:

mod(trunc(24 * 60 * 60 * (enddate - startdate)), 60)

Now you can put these together to get the string value you need.

1
  • 1
    Thanks for the upvote @GriffeyDog, and +1 yourself! Your answer will also work well. It comes down to lots of math versus lots of function calls, and I expect some folks may be more comfortable with lots of math.
    – Ed Gibbs
    Jan 13, 2014 at 17:27
3

To get the diff in seconds you can use this

select round(24 * 60 * 60* (TO_DATE('2017/02/17 9:32:25', 'YYYY/MM/DD HH:MI:SS') - TO_DATE('2017/02/17 8:30:30', 'YYYY/MM/DD HH:MI:SS'))) from dual;

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