Reputation: 2054
I have a datetime22.3 variable which I would like to display as date.
for eg I want to display 17JUL2006:00:00:00.000 as 07/17/2006
How do I do this?
Thanks.
additional info:
Thanks for all the replies.
**********
(stars). I am not sure what is going on.I am trying to use INTCK in the following manner but get error. I am not sure what I am doing wrong. I would appreciate your help. Thanks.
PROC FORMAT;
PICTURE DTFMT LOW-HIGH='%0m/%0d/%Y' (DATATYPE=DATETIME);
RUN;
data want;
dt_val1='17JUL2006:00:00:00.000'dt;
dt_val2='17AUG2012:00:00:00.000'dt;
format dt_val1 dt_val2 dt_val3 dtfmt.;
dt_val3=intck('MONTH',dt_val1,dt_val2);
put dt_val3;
run;
Upvotes: 1
Views: 27482
Reputation: 1
Converts date/time var to char date var:
BLEndDatex = put(datepart(BLEndDateTime),yymmdd10.);
Create numeric sas date without time:
BLEndDate = mdy(SUBSTR(BLEndDatex,6,2),SUBSTR(BLEndDatex,9,2),SUBSTR(BLEndDatex,1,4));
Thanks to Rizier123 & Heemin posting above to the first portion.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 3
data want;
dt_val1='17JUL2006:00:00:00.000'dt;
dt_you_want=input(substr(put(dt_val1,datetime22.3),1,9),date9.);
format dt ddmmyy10.;
run;
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4792
My answer from a duplicate question:
You need to convert original SAS DATETIME value (think of it as data type) to SAS DATE value using DATEPART() function and apply appropriate format:
proc sql;
create table work.abc2
as select *, DATEPART(a.Billing_Dt) format ddmmyy10. as Bill_date
from abc;
quit;
So the point is, as Keith pointed above, to apply appropriate type of format (e.g. ddmmyy10. is the SAS Date format) to appropriate values = variable content (e.g. (unformatted) 10
is 11th January 1960 if used as date, while it's 01JAN60:00:00:10 if used as Datetime value), so you have to be sure what your values represent and convert the values if needed.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 5470
use the same princpiple in a data step
data _null_;
a='17JUL2006:00:00:00.000'd;
put a;
put 'formatted date='a MMDDYY10.;
run;
This is the output from my SAS 9.3
44 data _null_;
45 a = '17JUL2006:00:00:00:000'D;
46 put a;
47 put 'formatted ' a MMDDYY10.;
48 run;
16999
formatted 07/17/2006
NOTE: DATA statement used (Total process time):
real time 0.00 seconds
cpu time 0.00 seconds
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 7602
You can't apply a standard date format directly against a datetime value, although there are some date formats you can prefix with 'DT' which will display a datetime as a date. Unfortunately the MMDDYY format is not one of these, however you could use DTDATE9. which would format your datetime as '17JUL2006'.
Another option is create your own format using the PICTURE statement, the example below will display the datetime as required.
proc format;
picture dtfmt low-high='%0m/%0d/%Y' (datatype=datetime);
run;
data want;
dt_val='17JUL2006:00:00:00.000'dt;
format dt_val dtfmt.;
run;
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 57686
If you want to display the variable's contents as a date (without changing the underlying value), use a FORMAT statement.
proc print;
format dte mmddyys10.;
run;
proc means;
class dte;
format dte mmddyys10.;
run;
etc. Note that you can also put the FORMAT in a data step, in which case any uses of the variable will automatically pick it up.
data foo;
format dte mmddyys10.;
run;
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1583
Formatting dates in SAS can be tricky. One method I've used in a macro is this:
/* get the date time */
%let start_date=%sysfunc(datetime().,10);
/* use the DATETIME informat to format the date */
%let fmt_start_date=%sysfunc(putn(&start_date, DATETIME.));
/* format the datetime as a date */
%put "&fmt_start_date."d;
There's a bunch of different ways to format dates. You could also use the FORMAT
statement if you're in a data step:
FORMAT STARTDATE YYMMDD10.;
In this case, the format of the column in the data step would give you YYYY-MM-DD and then you can separate the values and reconstruct from there.
There's additional information about SAS informats for dates here: http://support.sas.com/documentation/cdl/en/etsug/60372/HTML/default/viewer.htm#etsug_intervals_sect008.htm
If you need more info or examples, please let me know.
Best of luck!
Upvotes: 1