Kieran Benton
Kieran Benton

Reputation: 8890

Comparing date ranges

In MySQL, If I have a list of date ranges (range-start and range-end). e.g.

10/06/1983 to 14/06/1983
15/07/1983 to 16/07/1983
18/07/1983 to 18/07/1983

And I want to check if another date range contains ANY of the ranges already in the list, how would I do that?

e.g.

06/06/1983 to 18/06/1983 = IN LIST
10/06/1983 to 11/06/1983 = IN LIST
14/07/1983 to 14/07/1983 = NOT IN LIST

Upvotes: 128

Views: 68762

Answers (10)

Gio
Gio

Reputation: 1

SELECT * 
FROM tabla a 
WHERE ( @Fini <= a.dFechaFin AND @Ffin >= a.dFechaIni )
  AND ( (@Fini >= a.dFechaIni AND @Ffin <= a.dFechaFin) OR (@Fini >= a.dFechaIni AND @Ffin >= a.dFechaFin) OR (a.dFechaIni>=@Fini AND a.dFechaFin <=@Ffin) OR
(a.dFechaIni>=@Fini AND a.dFechaFin >=@Ffin) )

Upvotes: -2

Florian HENRY - Scopen
Florian HENRY - Scopen

Reputation: 991

Another method by using BETWEEN sql statement

Periods included :

SELECT *
FROM periods
WHERE @check_period_start BETWEEN range_start AND range_end
  AND @check_period_end BETWEEN range_start AND range_end

Periods excluded :

SELECT *
FROM periods
WHERE (@check_period_start NOT BETWEEN range_start AND range_end
  OR @check_period_end NOT BETWEEN range_start AND range_end)

Upvotes: 0

Paul Williamson
Paul Williamson

Reputation: 1

CREATE FUNCTION overlap_date(s DATE, e DATE, a DATE, b DATE)
RETURNS BOOLEAN DETERMINISTIC
RETURN s BETWEEN a AND b or e BETWEEN a and b or  a BETWEEN s and e;

Upvotes: 0

RickyS
RickyS

Reputation: 11

Try This on MS SQL


WITH date_range (calc_date) AS (
SELECT DATEADD(DAY, DATEDIFF(DAY, 0, [ending date]) - DATEDIFF(DAY, [start date], [ending date]), 0)
UNION ALL SELECT DATEADD(DAY, 1, calc_date)
FROM date_range 
WHERE DATEADD(DAY, 1, calc_date) <= [ending date])
SELECT  P.[fieldstartdate], P.[fieldenddate]
FROM date_range R JOIN [yourBaseTable] P on Convert(date, R.calc_date) BETWEEN convert(date, P.[fieldstartdate]) and convert(date, P.[fieldenddate]) 
GROUP BY  P.[fieldstartdate],  P.[fieldenddate];

Upvotes: 0

Lasse V. Karlsen
Lasse V. Karlsen

Reputation: 391426

This is a classical problem, and it's actually easier if you reverse the logic.

Let me give you an example.

I'll post one period of time here, and all the different variations of other periods that overlap in some way.

           |-------------------|          compare to this one
               |---------|                contained within
           |----------|                   contained within, equal start
                   |-----------|          contained within, equal end
           |-------------------|          contained within, equal start+end
     |------------|                       not fully contained, overlaps start
                   |---------------|      not fully contained, overlaps end
     |-------------------------|          overlaps start, bigger
           |-----------------------|      overlaps end, bigger
     |------------------------------|     overlaps entire period

on the other hand, let me post all those that doesn't overlap:

           |-------------------|          compare to this one
     |---|                                ends before
                                 |---|    starts after

So if you simple reduce the comparison to:

starts after end
ends before start

then you'll find all those that doesn't overlap, and then you'll find all the non-matching periods.

For your final NOT IN LIST example, you can see that it matches those two rules.

You will need to decide wether the following periods are IN or OUTSIDE your ranges:

           |-------------|
   |-------|                       equal end with start of comparison period
                         |-----|   equal start with end of comparison period

If your table has columns called range_end and range_start, here's some simple SQL to retrieve all the matching rows:

SELECT *
FROM periods
WHERE NOT (range_start > @check_period_end
           OR range_end < @check_period_start)

Note the NOT in there. Since the two simple rules finds all the non-matching rows, a simple NOT will reverse it to say: if it's not one of the non-matching rows, it has to be one of the matching ones.

Applying simple reversal logic here to get rid of the NOT and you'll end up with:

SELECT *
FROM periods
WHERE range_start <= @check_period_end
      AND range_end >= @check_period_start

Upvotes: 486

Rama Subba Reddy M
Rama Subba Reddy M

Reputation: 687

Look into the following example. It will helpful for you.

    SELECT  DISTINCT RelatedTo,CAST(NotificationContent as nvarchar(max)) as NotificationContent,
                ID,
                Url,
                NotificationPrefix,
                NotificationDate
                FROM NotificationMaster as nfm
                inner join NotificationSettingsSubscriptionLog as nfl on nfm.NotificationDate between nfl.LastSubscribedDate and isnull(nfl.LastUnSubscribedDate,GETDATE())
  where ID not in(SELECT NotificationID from removednotificationsmaster where Userid=@userid) and  nfl.UserId = @userid and nfl.RelatedSettingColumn = RelatedTo

Upvotes: 0

jonavon
jonavon

Reputation: 973

I created function to deal with this problem in MySQL. Just convert the dates to seconds before use.

DELIMITER ;;

CREATE FUNCTION overlap_interval(x INT,y INT,a INT,b INT)
RETURNS INTEGER DETERMINISTIC
BEGIN
DECLARE
    overlap_amount INTEGER;
    IF (((x <= a) AND (a < y)) OR ((x < b) AND (b <= y)) OR (a < x AND y < b)) THEN
        IF (x < a) THEN
            IF (y < b) THEN
                SET overlap_amount = y - a;
            ELSE
                SET overlap_amount = b - a;
            END IF;
        ELSE
            IF (y < b) THEN
                SET overlap_amount = y - x;
            ELSE
                SET overlap_amount = b - x;
            END IF;
        END IF;
    ELSE
        SET overlap_amount = 0;
    END IF;
    RETURN overlap_amount;
END ;;

DELIMITER ;

Upvotes: 0

David Aldridge
David Aldridge

Reputation: 52386

If your RDBMS supports the OVERLAP() function then this becomes trivial -- no need for homegrown solutions. (In Oracle it apparantly works but is undocumented).

Upvotes: 5

onedaywhen
onedaywhen

Reputation: 57023

In your expected results you say

06/06/1983 to 18/06/1983 = IN LIST

However, this period does not contain nor is contained by any of the periods in your table (not list!) of periods. It does, however, overlap the period 10/06/1983 to 14/06/1983.

You may find the Snodgrass book (http://www.cs.arizona.edu/people/rts/tdbbook.pdf) useful: it pre-dates mysql but the concept of time hasn't changed ;-)

Upvotes: 0

Paul Dixon
Paul Dixon

Reputation: 300895

Taking your example range of 06/06/1983 to 18/06/1983 and assuming you have columns called start and end for your ranges, you could use a clause like this

where ('1983-06-06' <= end) and ('1983-06-18' >= start)

i.e. check the start of your test range is before the end of the database range, and that the end of your test range is after or on the start of the database range.

Upvotes: 11

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