When I select date in SQL it is returned as 2011-02-25 21:17:33.933
. But I need only the Date part, that is 2011-02-25
. How can I do this?
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4I guess he wants a string, and therefore it is no duplicated– bernd_kFeb 26, 2011 at 8:01
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Possible duplicate of How to return the date part only from a SQL Server datetime datatype– TylerHSep 19, 2017 at 20:57
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@TylerH there is any way to get 2011-02-25 00:00:00.000 instead of current time ?– ThrainderJan 12, 2020 at 14:37
19 Answers
For SQL Server 2008:
Convert(date, getdate())
Please refer to https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/functions/getdate-transact-sql
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6
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35i have no idea why this is such an upvoted answer. this question is for SQL Server 2005, NOT 2008. 2005 doesn't have the
date
data-type therefore rendering this solution as invalid. Oct 17, 2014 at 20:01 -
107It's upvoted because people come looking for solutions to their problem, not the authors. So if 110 people found this worked for them I think it's fair that it has 110 upvotes.– JamesJun 18, 2015 at 11:37
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I have same error when i use select convert (table.order_date , getdate()); sql server version 2017 , the error (Type date is not a defined system type) the column type datetime– AbdullahMay 27, 2020 at 11:43
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1@zizzipupp just replace the text
getdate()
with the actual name of whatever column you want to convert– JakeMcMay 26, 2021 at 14:19
I guess he wants a string.
select convert(varchar(10), '2011-02-25 21:17:33.933', 120)
120 here tells the convert function that we pass the input date in the following format: yyyy-mm-dd hh:mi:ss
.
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i used this select convert(varchar(10), APPROVED_DATE, 120) , i got error column APPROVED_DATE datetime , how i will convert it ? error The multi-part identifier "LAB_RESULTS.APPROVED_DATE" could not be bound.– AbdullahMay 27, 2020 at 11:51
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This works fine as long as you are not going to put it into a group function and try and order by the date. Prad9's answer will work better for this– RecnatsAug 13, 2021 at 9:37
The fastest is datediff
, e.g.
select dateadd(d, datediff(d,0, [datecolumn]), 0), other..
from tbl
But if you only need to use the value, then you can skip the dateadd, e.g.
select ...
WHERE somedate <= datediff(d, 0, getdate())
where the expression datediff(d, 0, getdate())
is sufficient to return today's date without time portion.
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Oldie but goodie, used this trick dozens of times in older 2000/2005 DBs.– KeithSMay 25, 2017 at 19:45
Using CAST(GETDATE() As Date)
worked for me
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where i will add my column name ? select cast(getdate() as date , order_date)?– AbdullahMay 27, 2020 at 11:47
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2
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CAST(
FLOOR(
CAST( GETDATE() AS FLOAT )
)
AS DATETIME
)
http://www.bennadel.com/blog/122-Getting-Only-the-Date-Part-of-a-Date-Time-Stamp-in-SQL-Server.htm
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2
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1This doesn't work when you replace GETDATE() with a value of type DATETIME2. May 19, 2021 at 9:57
For 2008 older version :
SELECT DATEADD(DAY, DATEDIFF(DAY, 0, GETDATE()), 0)
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applauses for this! The others solutions only rely on the varchar(10) part, which just truncates the value. Oct 3, 2017 at 18:13
you can use like this
SELECT Convert(varchar(10), GETDATE(),120)
In case if you need the time to be zeros like 2018-01-17 00:00:00.000
:
SELECT CONVERT(DATETIME, CONVERT(DATE, GETDATE()), 121)
I would use DATEFROMPARTS function. It is quite easy and you don't need casting. As an example this query :
Select DATEFROMPARTS(YEAR(GETDATE()), MONTH(GETDATE()), DAY(GETDATE())) as myNewDate
will return
2021-01-21
The good part you can also create you own date, for example you want first day of a month as a date, than you can just use like below:
Select DATEFROMPARTS(YEAR(GETDATE()), MONTH(GETDATE()), 1) as myNewDate
The result will be:
2021-01-01
Its too late but following worked for me well
declare @vCurrentDate date=getutcdate()
select @vCurrentDate
When data type is date, hours would be truncated
It's a bit late, but use the ODBC "curdate" function (angle brackes 'fn' is the ODBC function escape sequence).
SELECT {fn curdate()}
Output: 2013-02-01
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4I am honestly curious on how you think your answer is better than the accepted answer. Or where you perhaps referring to the other answers? Feb 1, 2013 at 17:00
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1@Mikael Eriksson: Hmm, because ODBC-Functions are canonical functions and therefore indexable, unlike the nondeterministic SQL-Server functions. But never mind, it's only a scaling issue when you move from your 3 entries in testing to the 1 *10E6 entries in production, you get no problems during development ;) Feb 7, 2013 at 8:35
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8If you run this query
SELECT {fn curdate()} FROM (SELECT 1) AS T(X)
and have a look at the actual execution plan (xml version) you will see that what is actually executed isCONVERT(varchar(10),getdate(),23)
. So the datatype of this ODBC function isvarchar(10)
which means that if you want to compare the result with adatetime
you will get an implicit conversion fromvarchar(10)
todatetime
on a stringyyyy-mm-dd
. That implicit conversion will fail withset dateformat dmy
. Feb 7, 2013 at 9:24 -
1@Mikael Eriksson: Looks like a bug, they should be using SELECT CONVERT(char(8), GETDATE(), 112) instead. Oct 21, 2014 at 8:53
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"canonical functions and therefore indexable, unlike the nondeterministic SQL-Server functions" -- er, what? Sep 12, 2015 at 12:01
Convert it back to datetime after converting to date in order to keep same datatime if needed
select Convert(datetime, Convert(date, getdate()) )
If you want to return a date type as just a date use
CONVERT(date, SYSDATETIME())
or
SELECT CONVERT(date,SYSDATETIME())
or
DECLARE @DateOnly Datetime
SET @DateOnly=CONVERT(date,SYSDATETIME())
Use is simple:
convert(date, Btch_Time)
Example below:
Table:
Efft_d Loan_I Loan_Purp_Type_C Orig_LTV Curr_LTV Schd_LTV Un_drwn_Bal_a Btch_Time Strm_I Btch_Ins_I
2014-05-31 200312500 HL03 NULL 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 2014-06-17 11:10:57.330 1005 24851e0a-53983699-14b4-69109
Select * from helios.dbo.CBA_SRD_Loan where Loan_I in ('200312500') and convert(date, Btch_Time) = '2014-06-17'
select DATE(field) from table;
field value: 2020-12-15 12:19:00
select value: 2020-12-15
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Is this an MSSQL Server function? I checked Microsoft Docs but couldn't find it.– bafsarApr 18 at 13:24
In PLSQL you can use
to_char(SYSDATE,'dd/mm/yyyy')
First Convert the date to float (which displays the numeric), then ROUND
the numeric to 0 decimal points, then convert that to datetime.
convert(datetime,round(convert(float,orderdate,101),0) ,101)
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round
needs a third parameter "1" to truncate instead of round, otherwise when time is past noon it will get rounded up to the next day. Jan 12, 2021 at 10:55