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Home >> FAQs/Tutorials >> SQL Server FAQ
SQL Server FAQ - Date-Only Date and Time Literals
By: FYIcenter.com
(Continued from previous topic...)
What Happens If Date-Only Values Are Provided as Date and Time Literals?
If only date value is provided in a data and time literal,
the SQL Server will pad the time value with a zero, or '00:00:00.000', representing the midnight time of the day.
The tutorial exercise below gives you some good examples:
-- 'mm/dd/yyyy' format
DECLARE @x DATETIME;
SET @x = '05/19/2007';
SELECT @x;
GO
2007-05-19 00:00:00.000
-- 'mm.dd.yy' format
DECLARE @x DATETIME;
SET @x = '05.19.07';
SELECT @x;
GO
2007-05-19 00:00:00.000
-- 'yyyy-mm-dd' format
DECLARE @x DATETIME;
SET @x = '2007-05-19';
SELECT @x;
GO
2007-05-19 00:00:00.000
-- 'mon dd, yyyy' format
DECLARE @x DATETIME;
SET @x = 'May 19, 2007';
SELECT @x;
GO
2007-05-19 00:00:00.000
-- 'dd-mon-yyyy' format
DECLARE @x DATETIME;
SET @x = '19-May-2007';
SELECT @x;
GO
2007-05-19 00:00:00.000
(Continued on next topic...)
- What Is a Constant or Literal?
- How To Write Character String Constants or Literals?
- What Is a Collation?
- How To Specify the Collation for a Character Data Type?
- What Happens If Strings Are Casted into Wrong Code Pages?
- How To Find Out What Is the Default Collation in a Database?
- How Fixed Length Strings Are Truncated and Padded?
- How To Enter Unicode Character String Literals?
- How To Enter Binary String Literals?
- How To Enter Date and Time Literals?
- Why I Can Not Enter 0.001 Second in Date and Time Literals?
- What Happens If Date-Only Values Are Provided as Date and Time Literals?
- What Happens If Time-Only Values Are Provided as Date and Time Literals?
- What Are Out-of-Range Errors with Date and Time Literals?
- What Happens If an Integer Is Too Big for INT Date Type?
- How Extra Digits Are Handled with NUMERIC Data Type Literals?
- How REAL and FLOAT Literal Values Are Rounded?
- What Are the Underflow and Overflow Behaviors on FLOAT Literals?
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