Microsoft KB Archive/130514

= ACC: Storing, Calculating, and Comparing Date/Time Data =

Article ID: 130514

Article Last Modified on 1/19/2007

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Access 1.0 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Access 1.1 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Access 2.0 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Access 95 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Access 97 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q130514



Moderate: Requires basic macro, coding, and interoperability skills.



SUMMARY
This article explains how Microsoft Access stores the Date/Time data type and why you may receive unexpected results when you calculate or compare dates and times.

This article addresses the following topics:
 * Storing Date/Time Data
 * Formatting a Date/Time Field
 * Calculating Time Data
 * Comparing Date Data
 * Comparing Time Data



Storing Date/Time Data
Microsoft Access stores the Date/Time data type as a double-precision, floating-point number (up to 15 decimal places). The integer portion of the double-precision number represents the date; the decimal portion represents the time.

Valid date values range from -647,434 (January 1, 100 A.D.) to 2,958,465 (December 31, 9999 A.D.). A date value of 0 represents December 30, 1899. Microsoft Access stores dates prior to December 30, 1899 as negative numbers.

Valid time values range from .0 (00:00:00) to .99999 (23:59:59). The numeric value represents a fraction of one day. You can convert the numeric value into hours, minutes, and seconds by multiplying the numeric value by 24.

The following table illustrates how Microsoft Access stores Date/Time values:   Double         Date      Actual             Time      Actual Number        Portion   Date               Portion   Time --       1.0           1     December 31,1899   .0        12:00:00 A.M.        2.5           2     January 1, 1900    .5        12:00:00 P.M.    27468.96875   27468     March 15, 1975     .96875    11:15:00 P.M.    33914.125     33914     November 6, 1992   .125       3:00:00 A.M. To view how Microsoft Access stores Date/Time values as numbers, type the following commands in the Debug window in Microsoft Access 97 and 7.0 (or the Immediate window in Microsoft Access 2.0 or earlier), and note the results: ? CDbl(#5/18/87 14:00:00#)   31915.5833333333 ? CDbl(#12/14/1849 17:32:00#)   -18278.7305555556 To view the date and time of numeric values, type the following commands in the Debug window (or the Immediate window), and note the results: ? CVDate(1.375)   12/31/1899 9:00:00 AM ? CVDate(-304398.575)   8/1/1066 1:48:00 PM

Formatting a Date/Time Field
You can format a Date/Time value to display a date, a time, or both. When you use a date-only format, Microsoft Access stores a value of 0 for the time portion. When you use a time-only format, Microsoft Access stores a value of 0 for the date portion.

The following table illustrates how Microsoft Access stores Date/Time values and how you can display those values using different formats:   Stored Value            Default Format    Custom Format (Double Number)        (General Date)    (mm/dd/yyyy hh:nn:ss AM/PM) -  34834.0                 5/15/95           05/15/1995 12:00:00 A.M.       0.546527777777778   1:07 PM           12/30/1899 01:07:00 P.M.   34041.9375              3/13/93 10:30PM   03/13/1993 10:30:00 P.M. NOTE: The default format for a Date/Time value is General Date. If a value is date-only, then no time is displayed. If the value is time-only, then no date is displayed.

Calculating Time Data
Because a time value is stored as a fraction of a 24-hour day, you may receive incorrect formatting results when you calculate time intervals greater than 24 hours. To work around this behavior, you can create a user-defined function to ensure that time intervals are formatted correctly.

This article assumes that you are familiar with Visual Basic for Applications and with creating Microsoft Access applications using the programming tools provided with Microsoft Access. For more information about Visual Basic for Applications, please refer to your version of the "Building Applications with Microsoft Access" manual.

NOTE: Visual Basic for Applications is called Access Basic in Microsoft Access versions 1.x and 2.0. For more information about Access Basic, please refer to the "Introduction to Programming" manual in Microsoft Access version 1.x or the "Building Applications" manual in Microsoft Access version 2.0

To calculate and format time intervals correctly, follow these steps:

  Create a module and type the following line in the Declarations section if it is not already there: Option Explicit   Type the following procedure.

NOTE: In the following sample code, an underscore (_) at the end of a line is used as a line-continuation character. Remove the underscore from the end of the line when re-creating this code in Access Basic. '--     '  This function calculates the elapsed time between two values and ' formats the result in four different ways. '     '  The function accepts interval arguments such as the following: '     '     #5/12/95 6:00:00AM# - #5/11/95 10:00:00PM# '     '     -or- '     '     [End Time]-[Start Time] '--

Function ElapsedTime (Interval) Dim x       x = Int(CSng(Interval * 24 * 3600)) & " Seconds" Debug.Print x       x = Int(CSng(Interval * 24 * 60)) & ":" & Format(Interval, "ss") _ & " Minutes:Seconds" Debug.Print x       x = Int(CSng(Interval * 24)) & ":" & Format(Interval, "nn:ss") _ & " Hours:Minutes:Seconds" Debug.Print x       x = Int(CSng(Interval)) & " days " & Format(Interval, "hh") _ & " Hours " & Format(Interval, "nn") & " Minutes " & _ Format(Interval, "ss") & " Seconds" Debug.Print x

End Function   Type the following line in the Debug window (or the Immediate window), and then press ENTER: ? ElapsedTime(#6/1/93 8:23:00PM#-#6/1/93 8:12:12AM#) Note that the following values are displayed: <pre class="fixed_text">  43848 Seconds 730:48 Minutes:Seconds 12:10:48 Hours:Minutes:Seconds 0 days 12 Hours 10 Minutes 48 Seconds </li></ol>

Comparing Date Data
Because dates and times are stored together as double-precision numbers, you may receive unexpected results when you compare Date/Time data. For example, if you type the following expression in the Debug window (or the Immediate window in earlier versions), you receive a false (0) result even if today's date is 3/31/95: ? Now=DateValue("3/31/95") The Now function returns a double-precision number representing the current date and time. However, the DateValue function returns an integer number representing the date but not a fractional time value. As a result, Now equals DateValue only when Now returns a time of 00:00:00 (12:00:00 A.M.).

To receive accurate results when you compare date values, use one of the functions below. To test each function, type it in the Debug window (or the Immediate window), substitute the current date for 3/31/95, and then press ENTER:

<ul>  To return an integer value, use the Date function: ?Date=DateValue("3/31/95") </li>  To remove the fractional portion of the Now function, use the Int function: ?Int(Now)=DateValue("3/31/95") </li></ul>

Comparing Time Data
When you compare time values, you may receive inconsistent results because a time value is stored as the fractional portion of a double-precision, floating-point number. For example, if you type the following expression in the Immediate window, you receive a false (0) result even though the two time values look the same:

NOTE: The time values that fail depend on the version of Visual Basic for Applications.

Access 2.0:

var1 = #2:00:00 PM#

var2 = DateAdd("n", 10, var1)

? var2 = #2:10:00 PM#

Access 95 and 97:

var1 = #2:01:00 PM#

var2 = DateAdd("n", 10, var1)

? var2 = #2:11:00 PM#

When Microsoft Access converts a time value to a fraction, the calculated result may not be the exact equivalent of the time value. The small difference caused by the calculation is enough to produce a false (0) result when you compare a stored value to a constant value.

To receive accurate results when you compare time values, use one of the methods below. To test each method, type it in the Immediate window, and then press ENTER:

<ul>  Add an associated date to the time comparison: var1 = #1/1/90 2:00:00 PM# var2 = DateAdd("n", 10, var1) ? var2 = #1/1/90 2:10:00 PM# </li>  Convert the time values to String data types before you compare them: var1 = #2:00:00 PM# var2 = DateAdd("n", 10, var1) ? CStr(var2) = CStr(#2:10:00 PM#) </li>  Use the DateDiff function to compare precise units such as seconds: var1 = #2:00:00 PM# var2 = DateAdd("n", 10, var1) ? DateDiff("s", var2, #2:10:00 PM#) = 0 </li></ul>

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