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I have a bunch of product orders and I'm trying to group by the date and sum the quantity for that date. How can I group by the month/day/year without taking the time part into consideration?

3/8/2010 7:42:00 should be grouped with 3/8/2010 4:15:00

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9 Answers 9

492

Cast/Convert the values to a Date type for your group by.

GROUP BY CAST(myDateTime AS DATE)
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  • 3
    do you know how I would do the same with LINQ to SQL? May 19, 2011 at 5:56
  • 1
    @Nick - not sure. Try using DateTime.Date.
    – Oded
    May 19, 2011 at 6:03
  • 3
    - Linq to Sql : DateTime.Date - Entity Framework: EntityFunctions.TruncateTime(myDateTime) Jul 5, 2012 at 22:47
  • 1
    I agree, I was responding to The Muffin Man who was asking about it in an ORM context. Feb 2, 2015 at 18:48
  • 6
    Thanks a lot...it solved my problem. added ' group by CAST(date_modified AS DATE)' . don't forget to add the same( CAST(date_modified AS DATE) ) in select cluase. Apr 12, 2016 at 6:57
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GROUP BY DATEADD(day, DATEDIFF(day, 0, MyDateTimeColumn), 0)

Or in SQL Server 2008 onwards you could simply cast to Date as @Oded suggested:

GROUP BY CAST(orderDate AS DATE)
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17

In pre Sql 2008 By taking out the date part:

GROUP BY CONVERT(CHAR(8),DateTimeColumn,10)
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CAST datetime field to date

select  CAST(datetime_field as DATE), count(*) as count from table group by CAST(datetime_field as DATE);
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  • Repeats the accepted answer. Please don't re-post answers. Instead, vote for answers that helped you. Jul 19, 2022 at 17:15
  • @GertArnold it's not the same -- the accepted answer only recommends adding CAST to the GROUP BY clause, while this answer recommends adding it to the SELECT as well
    – M.M
    Aug 31, 2022 at 4:48
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GROUP BY DATE(date_time_column)

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Here's an example that I used when I needed to count the number of records for a particular date without the time portion:

select count(convert(CHAR(10), dtcreatedate, 103) ),convert(char(10), dtcreatedate, 103)
FROM dbo.tbltobecounted
GROUP BY CONVERT(CHAR(10),dtcreatedate,103)
ORDER BY CONVERT(CHAR(10),dtcreatedate,103)
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    The ORDER BY will not work as supposed because it will not treat it as date so it will sort by day
    – Ed_
    Mar 2, 2016 at 16:25
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Here is the example works fine in oracle

select to_char(columnname, 'DD/MON/yyyy'), count(*) from table_name group by to_char(createddate, 'DD/MON/yyyy');
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Well, for me it was pretty much straight, I used cast with groupby:

Example:

Select cast(created_at as date), count(1) from dbname.tablename GROUP BY cast(created_at as date)

Note: I am using this on MSSQL 2016.

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  • Repeats the accepted answer. Please don't re-post answers. Instead, vote for answers that helped you. Jul 19, 2022 at 17:15
-1

I believe you need to group by , in that day of the month of the year . so why not using TRUNK_DATE functions . The way it works is described below :

Group By DATE_TRUNC('day' , 'occurred_at_time')
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  • 1
    date_trunc is for PostgreSQL not SQL Server which going by the tags, the OP was seeking a solution for SQL server.
    – Dave Hogan
    Jun 1, 2020 at 15:44

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