SET DATE Command
Specifies the format for the display of Date and DateTime expressions.
SET DATE [TO] AMERICAN | ANSI | BRITISH | FRENCH | GERMAN | ITALIAN
| JAPAN | TAIWAN | USA | MDY | DMY | YMD| SHORT | LONG
Remarks
Here are the settings and the resulting date formats:
Setting | Format |
---|---|
AMERICAN | mm/dd/yy |
ANSI | yy.mm.dd |
BRITISH/FRENCH | dd/mm/yy |
GERMAN | dd.mm.yy |
ITALIAN | dd-mm-yy |
JAPAN | yy/mm/dd |
TAIWAN | yy/mm/dd |
USA | mm-dd-yy |
MDY | mm/dd/yy |
DMY | dd/mm/yy |
YMD | yy/mm/dd |
SHORT | Short date format determined by the Windows Control Panel short date setting. |
LONG | Long date format determined by the Windows Control Panel long date setting. |
Note When SET DATE is set to SHORT or LONG, a date before {^1601-01-01} is invalid and generates an error.
The default date setting is AMERICAN.
The SET DATE setting also determines how the date appears in datetime expressions.
If DATE is set to SHORT or LONG, the SET CENTURY, SET MARK, SET HOURS, and SET SECONDS settings are ignored.
SET DATE is scoped to the current data session.
See Also
DATE( ) | DATETIME( ) | SET CENTURY | SET DATASESSION | SET MARK TO | SET SYSFORMATS