DATENAME (Transact-SQL)
Returns a character string that represents the specified datepart of the specified date
For an overview of all Transact-SQL date and time data types and functions, see Date and Time Data Types and Functions (Transact-SQL). For information and examples that are common to date and time data types and functions, see Using Date and Time Data.
Syntax
DATENAME (datepart ,date )
Arguments
datepart
Is the part of the date to return. The following table lists all valid datepart arguments. User-defined variable equivalents are not valid.datepart
Abbreviations
year
yy, yyyy
quarter
qq, q
month
mm, m
dayofyear
dy, y
day
dd, d
week
wk, ww
weekday
dw
hour
hh
minute
mi, n
second
ss, s
millisecond
ms
microsecond
mcs
nanosecond
ns
TZoffset
tz
date
Is an expression that can be resolved to a time, date, smalldatetime, datetime, datetime2, or datetimeoffset value. date can be an expression, column expression, user-defined variable, or string literal.To avoid ambiguity, use four-digit years. For information about two-digit years, see two digit year cutoff Option.
Return Type
nvarchar
Return Value
- Each datepart and its abbreviations return the same value.
The return value depends on the language environment set by using SET LANGUAGE and by the default language of the login. The return value is dependant on SET DATEFORMAT if date is a string literal of some formats. SET DATEFORMAT does not affect the return value when the date is a column expression of a date or time data type.
For versions of SQL Server later than SQL Server 2000, when the date parameter has a date data type argument, the return value depends on the setting specified by using SET DATEFIRST.
TZoffset datepart Argument
If datepart argument is TZoffset (tz) and the date argument has no time zone offset, 0 is returned.
Default Returned for a datepart That Is Not in the date Argument
If the data type of the date argument does not have the specified datepart, the default for that datepart will be returned.
For example, the default year-month-day for any date data type is 1900-01-01. The following statement has date part arguments for datepart, a time argument for date, and returns 1900, January, 1, 1, Monday.
SELECT DATENAME(year, '12:10:30.123')
,DATENAME(month, '12:10:30.123')
,DATENAME(day, '12:10:30.123')
,DATENAME(dayofyear, '12:10:30.123')
,DATENAME(weekday, '12:10:30.123');
The default hour-minute-second for the time data type is 00:00:00. The following statement has time part arguments for datepart, a date argument for date, and returns 0, 0, 0.
SELECT DATENAME(hour, '2007-06-01')
,DATENAME(minute, '2007-06-01')
,DATENAME(second, '2007-06-01');
Remarks
DATENAME can be used in the select list, WHERE, HAVING, GROUP BY, and ORDER BY clauses. In SQL Server 2008, DATENAME implicitly casts string literals as datetime2 types. When using DATENAME with DATEADD, avoid implicit casts of string literals. For more information, see DATEADD (Transact-SQL)
Examples
The following example returns the date parts for the specified date.
SELECT DATENAME(datepart,'2007-10-30 12:15:32.1234567 +05:10')
Here is the result set.
datepart |
Return value |
---|---|
year, yyyy, yy |
2007 |
quarter, qq, q |
4 |
month, mm, m |
October |
dayofyear, dy, y |
303 |
day, dd, d |
30 |
week, wk, ww |
44 |
weekday, dw |
Tuesday |
hour, hh |
12 |
minute, n |
15 |
second, ss, s |
32 |
millisecond, ms |
123 |
microsecond, mcs |
123456 |
nanosecond, ns |
123456700 |
TZoffset, tz |
310 |