2

I have a column called (date) in an expenses table that displays a date in the formate "2015-02-15". I want to build a list of the Distinct unique months and years so that the user can pick what month to show. I have tried using the following answer without any luck.

"1" "1" "Food Shopping" "156"   "2015-01-15"
"2" "1" "Water" "200"   "2015-02-15"
"3" "2" "Car Maintenance"   "30"    "2014-12-15"
"4" "4" "Boobs" "200"   "2015-02-15"

So Ideally I should get

December 2014
January 2015
February 2015

Could someone point me in the right direction. Thanks.

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  • [SELECT distinct YEAR(startdate) FROM eventhead] will give you distinct years in MS SQL, but I don't have sql.lite to test Feb 26, 2015 at 11:39
  • @DovesandChicks This does not work in SQLite.
    – CL.
    Feb 26, 2015 at 11:40

2 Answers 2

4

Your date column is already in the correct format, so it is not necessary to use the unixepoch modifier. Just remove it from the original query:

SELECT CASE m 
       WHEN '01' THEN 'January' 
       WHEN '02' THEN 'Febuary' 
       WHEN '03' THEN 'March' 
       WHEN '04' THEN 'April' 
       WHEN '05' THEN 'May' 
       WHEN '06' THEN 'June' 
       WHEN '07' THEN 'July' 
       WHEN '08' THEN 'August' 
       WHEN '09' THEN 'September' 
       WHEN '10' THEN 'October' 
       WHEN '11' THEN 'November' 
       WHEN '12' THEN 'December' 
       END || ' ' || y AS dates
FROM 
(
  SELECT DISTINCT 
         strftime('%m', date) m,
         strftime('%Y', date) y
    FROM expenses
)
ORDER BY y, m
0
1

If you can live with ISO standard formats, you can do:

select distinct date(date, '%Y-%m')
from expenses;

If not, you can use logic to get the month name:

select distinct date(date, '%Y') || ' ' ||
       (case when date(date, '%m') = '01' then 'January'
             . . .
             when date(date, '%m') = '12' then 'December'
        end)

Oops, I put the year first and then the month. You can reverse them if you like.

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  • Hi, I have tried the above but it seems to only return Null, even tried changing the column name from date to Record_Date to see if it makes a difference.
    – ORStudios
    Feb 26, 2015 at 11:49
  • SQLite has no year() function, and date() does not have a format specifier, and strftime() does not return a number.
    – CL.
    Feb 26, 2015 at 11:56
  • @ORStudios . . . Oops, that was wishful thinking. Feb 26, 2015 at 11:57
  • @CL. . . . Those comparisons should be to strings. Feb 26, 2015 at 11:58

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