date createDate( integer year, integer month, integer day );
date createDate( integer year, integer month, integer day, string timeZone );
date createDate( integer year, integer month, integer day, integer hour, integer minute, integer second );
date createDate( integer year, integer month, integer day, integer hour, integer minute, integer second, string timeZone );
date createDate( integer year, integer month, integer day, integer hour, integer minute, integer second, integer millisecond );
date createDate( integer year, integer month, integer day, integer hour, integer minute, integer second, integer millisecond, string timeZone );
Date Functions
When you work with a date, you may use functions that process dates.
In these functions, sometimes a format pattern of a date or any number must be defined. Also a locale and time zone can have an influence on their formatting.
-
For detailed information about the date formatting and/or parsing, see Date and Time Format.
-
For detailed information about locale, see Locale.
-
For detailed information about time zones, see Time Zone.
Remember that numeric and date formats are displayed using the system value Locale or Locale specified in the For more information on how Locale and Time zone may be changed in the |
Here we provide the list of the functions:
createDate
The function createDate()
creates a date using provided year, month (numbered from 1), day of month, hour, minute, second, millisecond and time zone.
If any of the above mentioned parameters is missing, value is set to zero. If the time zone is missing, the default time zone is used.
If one or more of specified parameters is null
, the function fails.
Compatibility
The functions createDate(integer,integer,integer)
, createDate(integer,integer,integer,string)
, createDate(integer,integer,integer,integer,integer,integer)
, createDate(integer,integer,integer,integer,integer,integer,integer)
, createDate(integer,integer,integer,integer,integer,integer,string)
and createDate(integer,integer,integer,integer,integer,integer,string)
are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
The function createDate(2013, 7, 31)
returns a date corresponding to the 31 July 2013 0:00 using the default time zone.
The summer/winter time is taken into account.
For example, the expression returns 30 July 2013 22:00 GMT
in time zone GMT+1
using the summer time.
The function createDate(2013, 10, 4, "GMT+3")
returns 4 October 2013 0:00 GMT+3
.
It is the same as 3 October 2013 21:00 GMT+0
.
The function createDate(2009, 2, 13, 23, 31, 30)
returns 13 February 2009 23:31:30
in the default time zone.
For example the expression corresponds to 13 February 2009 22:31:30 GMT
if the default time zone is GMT+1
.
The function createDate(2009, 2, 13, 23, 31, 30, "GMT-1")
returns 14 February 2009 0:31:30 GMT
.
The function createDate(2009, 2, 13, 23, 31, 30, 123)
returns 13 February 2009 23:31:30.123
in the default time zone.
For example the expression corresponds to 13 February 2009 22:31:30.123 GMT
if the default time zone is GMT+1
.
The function createDate(2009, 2, 13, 23, 31, 30, 124, "GMT-1")
returns 14 February 2009 0:31:30.124 GMT
See also: str2date
dateAdd
date dateAdd( date arg, long amount, unit timeunit );
The dateAdd()
function adds a number of time units to the date and returns a new date.
Parameter arg
is the date to which the number of time units is added.
Parameter amount
defines the number of units to be added.
The unit
parameter defines the unit of the second function parameter.
The unit
argument can be one of the following: year
, month
, week
, day
, hour
, minute
, second
, millisec
.
The unit must be specified as a constant.
It can neither be received through an edge nor set as a variable.
The function returns the new resulting date.
If one of the arguments is null
, the function fails with an error.
Compatibility
The dateAdd(date,long,timeunit)
function is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
Let us set up date d
to 13 February 2009 23:31:30 GMT.
The function dateAdd(d, 1, year)
returns 2010-02-13 23:31:30 GMT
.
The function dateAdd(d, 1, month)
returns 2009-03-13 23:31:30 GMT
.
The function dateAdd(d, 1, day)
returns 2009-02-14 23:31:30 GMT
.
The czDate
is 30.3.2014 00:00:00
in the time zone Europe/Prague
.
The function dateAdd(czDate, 24, hour)
returns 31.3.2014 01:00:00 CEST
.
The function dateAdd(czDate, 1, day)
returns 31.3.2014 00:00:00 CEST
The ukDate
is 2014-03-30 00:20:00
in the time zone Europe/London
.
The function dateAdd(ukDate, 41, minute)
returns 2014-04 02:01:00
in the time zone Europe/London
.
The function dateAdd(ukDate, 1, hour)
returns 2014-03-30 02:20:00
in the time zone Europe/London
.
The function dateAdd(ukDate, 1, day)
returns 2014-03-31 00:20:00
in the time zone Europe/London
.
See also: createDate, dateDiff
dateDiff
long dateDiff( date later, date earlier, unit timeunit );
The dateDiff()
function returns the difference of two date variables in a specified time units.
The later
and earlier
parameters represent a later and earlier date respectively.
The difference of two dates is expressed in defined time units.
The unit
can be one of the following: year
, month
, week
, day
, hour
, minute
, second
, millisec
.
The unit must be specified as a constant.
It can be neither received through an edge nor set as variable.
If the |
The result is a long
number.
The result of the function is truncated: two date variables with a difference of 40
hours yield a difference of 1
days.
If one of the given argument is null
, the function fails with an error.
Be aware that adjusting for the daylight saving time - winter/summer time affects the results of Different countries switch between summer time and winter time on different days. The function |
Compatibility
The dateDiff(date,date,timeunit)
function is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
The function dateDiff(2008-06-18, 2001-02-03, year)
returns 7
.
But, dateDiff(2001-02-03, 2008-06-18, year)
returns -7
.
Let’s call 2009-02-13 23:31:30 GMT+0
as d1
and 2011-01-10 20:12:33
as d2
.
The function dateDiff(d2, d1, year)
returns 1
.
The function dateDiff(d2, d1, month)
returns 22
.
The function dateDiff(d2, d1, day)
returns 695
.
The variable L2
is 2014-03-30 02:01:00
in the time zone Europe/London
.
The variable L1
is 2014-03-30 00:59:00
in the time zone Europe/London
.
The function dateDiff(L2, L1, minute)
returns 2
.
Set 2014-03-30 00:15:00
with the time zone Europe/London
as london1
and set 2014-03-30 02:15:00
with the same time zone as london2
.
The function dateDiff(london2, london1, hour)
returns 1
.
Set 2014-03-30 00:15:00
with the time zone America/New_York
as ny1
and set 2014-03-30 02:15:00
with the same time zone as ny2
.
The function dateDiff(ny2, ny1, hour)
returns 2
.
Set 2014-02-10 10:15:00
with the time zone America/New_York
as nyFeb10
and 2014-02-10 10:15:00
with the time zone Europe/London
as ukFeb10
.
The function dateDiff(nyFeb10, ukFeb10, hour)
returns 5
.
Set 2014-03-10 10:15:00
with the time zone America/New_York
as nyMar10
and 2014-03-10 10:15:00
with the time zone Europe/London
as ukMar10
.
The function dateDiff(nyMar10, ukMar10, hour)
returns 4
.
Set 2014-03-08 12:14:16
with the time zone America/New_York
as ny21
and 2014-03-09 12:14:16
with the same time zone as ny22
.
The function dateDiff(ny22, ny21, millisec)
returns 82800000
.
The function dateDiff(ny22, ny21, second)
returns 82800
.
The function dateDiff(ny22, ny21, minute)
returns 1380
.
The function dateDiff(ny22, ny21, hour)
returns 23
.
The function dateDiff(ny22, ny21, day)
returns 1
if processing runs on machine with the same time zone as the data (America/New_York
). The function returns 0
if processing runs on machine with a different time zone (e.g. Europe/London
). Time in the time zone Europe/London
is turned on the different day than in time zones in US.
If you would process data having the time zone America/New_York
using the time zone America/Los_Angeles
, you would get 0
or 1
.
extractDate
date extractDate( date arg );
The extractDate
function takes a date argument and returns only the information containing year, month, and day values.
The function’s argument is not modified by the return value.
If the input argument is null
, the function returns null
.
The default locale and default time zone are applied.
Compatibility
The extractDate(date)
function is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
Let’s call 13 February 2009 23:31:30 GMT+0 as d
.
The function extractDate(d)
returns 2009-02-13 0:00:00 GMT+0
provided the default time zone is GMT+0.
If the default time zone is GMT+1, the function will return 2009-02-14 0:00:00 GMT+1
.
(The result corresponds to 2009-02-13 23:00:00 GMT+0
.)
See also: extractTime, str2date
extractTime
date extractTime( date arg );
The extractTime()
function takes a date argument and returns only the information containing hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds.
The function’s argument is not modified by the return value.
If the input argument is null
, the function returns null
.
The default locale and default time zone are applied.
Compatibility
The extractTime(date)
function is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
Let’s call 13 February 2009 23:31:30 GMT+0 as d
.
The function extractTime(d)
returns 23:31:30
provided the default time zone is GMT+0.
If the default time zone is GMT+1, the function will return 0:31:30
.
See also: extractDate, str2date
getYear
integer getYear( date arg );
integer getYear( date arg, string timeZone );
The getYear()
function returns the year of arg
.
If the argument is null
, the function returns null
.
If the timeZone
argument is null
or the argument is missing, the function uses the default Time Zone.
Compatibility
The getYear(date)
and getYear(date,string)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 1:05:00 GMT as d
.
The function getYear(d)
returns 2011
.
The default time zone is used.
The function getYear(d, "GMT+0")
returns 2011
.
the function getYear(d, "GMT-3")
returns 2010
.
There have not been a midnight in the GMT-3
yet.
getMonth
integer getMonth( date arg );
integer getMonth( date arg, string timeZone );
The getMonth()
function returns the month of the year (numbered from 1) of arg
.
If the argument is null
, the function returns null
.
If the timeZone
argument is null
or the argument is missing, the function uses the default Time Zone.
Compatibility
The getMonth(date)
and getMonth(date,string)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 1:05:00 GMT as d
.
The function getMonth(d)
returns 1
provided the default time zone is GMT+1
.
The function getMonth(d, "GMT+0")
returns 1
.
The function getMonth(d, "GMT-3")
returns 12
.
There have not been a midnight in the GMT-3
yet.
getDay
integer getDay( date arg );
integer getDay( date arg, string timeZone );
The getDay()
function returns the day of the month of arg
.
If the argument is null
, the function returns null
.
If the timeZone
argument is null
or the time zone argument is not present, the function uses the default Time Zone.
Compatibility
The getDay(date)
and getDay(date,string)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 1:05:00 GMT as d
.
The function getDay(d)
returns 1
provided the default time zone is GMT+1
.
The function getDay(d, "GMT+0")
returns 1
.
The function getDay(d, "GMT-3")
returns 31
.
There have not been a midnight in the GMT-3
yet.
getHour
integer getHour( date arg );
integer getHour( date arg, string timeZone );
The getHour()
function returns the hour of the day (24-hour clock) of arg
.
If the argument is null
, the function returns null
.
Otherwise the specified time zone is used.
If the timeZone
argument is null
, the function uses the default Time Zone.
Compatibility
The getHour(date)
and getHour(date)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 1:05:00 GMT as d
.
The function getHour(d)
returns 2
provided the default time zone is GMT+1
.
The function getHour(d, "GMT+0")
returns 1
.
The function getHour(d, "GMT-3")
returns 22
.
getMinute
integer getMinute( date arg );
integer getMinute( date arg, string timeZone );
The getMinute()
function returns the minute of the hour of arg
.
If the argument is null
, the function returns null
.
If the timeZone
argument is null
or the parameter is not present, the function uses the default Time Zone.
Compatibility
The getMinute(date)
and getMinute(date,string)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 1:05:00 GMT as d
.
The function getMinute(d)
returns 5
, provided the default time zone is GMT+1
.
The function getMinute(d, "GMT+0")
returns 5
.
the function getMinute(d, "GMT-9:30")
returns 35
.
getSecond
integer getSecond( date arg );
integer getSecond( date arg, string timeZone );
The getSecond()
function returns the second of the minute of arg
.
If the argument is null
, the function returns null
.
If the timeZone
argument is null
or the argument in not present, the function uses the default Time Zone.
Compatibility
The getSecond(date)
and getSecond(date,string)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 1:05:02 GMT as d
.
The function getSecond(d)
returns 2
.
The function getSecond(d, "GMT+0")
returns 2
.
the function getSecond(d, "GMT-4")
returns 2
.
getMillisecond
integer getMillisecond( date arg );
integer getMillisecond( date arg, string timeZone );
The getMillisecond()
function returns the millisecond of the second of arg
.
If the argument is null
, the function returns null
.
If the timeZone
argument is null
or the parameter is not present, the function uses the default Time Zone.
Compatibility
The getMillisecond(date)
and getMillisecond(date,string)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 1:05:02.123 GMT as d
.
The function getMillisecond(d)
returns 123
.
The function getMillisecond(d, "GMT+0")
returns 123
.
the function getMillisecond(d, "GMT-4")
returns 123
.
randomDate
date randomDate( date startDate, date endDate );
date randomDate( long startDate, long endDate );
date randomDate( string startDate, string endDate, string format );
date randomDate( string startDate, string endDate, string format, string locale );
date randomDate( string startDate, string endDate, string format, string locale, string timeZone );
The randomDate()
function returns a random date between startDate
and endDate
.
These resulting dates are generated at random for different records and different fields.
They can be different for both records and fields.
The return value can also be startDate
or endDate
.
However, it cannot be the date before startDate
nor after endDate
.
If one of the given dates is null
, the function fails with an error.
If the format
is null
or the function does not have the format
parameter, the default value is used.
If the timezone
is null
or the function does not have the timezone
parameter, the default Time Zone is used.
If the locale
is null
or the field is missing, the default Locale is used.
Compatibility
The randomDate(long,long)
, randomDate(date,date)
, randomDate(string,string,string,string)
and randomDate(string,string,string)
functions are available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
The function randomDate(string,string,string,string,string)
is available since CloverETL 3.5.0-M1.
Let’s call 2011-01-01 0:00:00
as date1
and 2012-01-01 0:00:00
as date2
.
The function randomDate(date1, date2)
returns for example 2011-06-19
.
The function randomDate(123456789000L, 1266103890000L)
returns for example 2009-06-20
.
The function randomDate("2011-11-11", "2012-12-12", "yyyy-MM-dd")
returns for example 2012-09-01
.
The function randomDate("10 octobre 2011", "11 novembre 2011", "dd MMMM yyyy", "fr.FR")
returns for example 2011-10-14
.
The function randomDate("2011-01-11", "2011-08-12", "yyyy-MM-dd", "en.US", "GMT-5")
returns for example 2011-05-14
.
See also: random, randomBoolean, randomGaussian, randomInteger, randomLong, randomString, randomUUID, setRandomSeed
today
date today( );
The today()
function accepts no argument and returns current date and time.
Compatibility
The today()
function is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
today()
function returns, for example, 2013-11-06 12:32:15
provided today is 6 November 2013 and the time is 12:32:15.
See also: zeroDate
zeroDate
date zeroDate( );
The zeroDate()
function accepts no argument and returns 1.1.1970 0:00:00 GMT.
Compatibility
The zeroDate()
function is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
See also: today
trunc
The function |
date trunc( date arg );
The trunc()
function removes time from date.
The function takes one date argument and returns the date with the same year, month and day, but hour, minute, second and millisecond values are set to 0.
If the argument is null
, the function fails with an error.
The function trunc
modifies the input parameter.
Compatibility
The trunc(date)
function is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
See also: extractDate, truncDate
truncDate
The function |
date truncDate( date arg );
The truncDate()
function returns a date with the same hour, minute, second and millisecond as the given date, but year is 1970, month and day values are set to 1.
The 0 date is 1970-01-01.
If the given argument is null
, the function fails with an error.
The function truncDate
modifies the input parameter.
Compatibility
The function truncDate(date)
is available since CloverETL 3.0.0.
See also: extractTime, trunc