The Dates are just additional parameters. One of the problems with the way you (and the other answers) are doing it is that you are converting perfectly good DateTime
variables to string. MSAccess/OleDb will usually make sense of things, but it is unnecessary and allowing something else to interpret your intent is usually undesirable.
The DB columns must be implemented as a Date
type in order for the data to be treated as Dates
(BETWEEN), but you do not need to "format" the Date variables (ever).
Another problem is disposing of Command and Connection objects when done with them:
Dim SQL = "SELECT SUM(Total) FROM [T500] WHERE Pro =@Pro AND Dat BETWEEN @dt1 AND @dt2"
Using dbCon As OleDbCOnnection(GetConnection()),
cmd As New OleDbCommand(SQL, dbCon)
dbCon.Open
' ToDO be sure SelectedItems.COunt >0 earlier
cmd2.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Pro", ComboBoxBP.SelectedItem.ToString)
cmd2.Parameters.AddWithValue("@dt1", DateTimePicker1.Value)
cmd2.Parameters.AddWithValue("@dt2", DateTimePicker2.Value)
Dim Total = cmd.ExecuteScalar()
...
End Using ' close and dispose of Command and Connection objects
As you can see, you pass DateTime values to it as any other parameter, and the DTP's.Value
property will work perfectly well without any massaging or processing.
Here is a link for info on the GetConnection()
method and dbConnections in general.
Note that OleDB
does not actually use named parameters (@Pro, @dt1). They are just placeholders, you have to AddWithValue
in the same order as they appear in the SQL statement. It is more common to see params specified as "?", but meaningful params are helpful in mapping the right var to the right param in code.
Finally, it cant happen with a DateTimePicker
, but gluing bits of string from UI controls together to make SQL can result in SQL injection attacks and should always be avoided. SQL using parameters is generally easier to code, build, read and mantain.
DTST
andDTEn
and let the framework do it's job? Did you ever wonder what<DateTime>.ToString()
returns? Is it a valid ms-access date format? What about localization?