[R] sqlQuery with date attribute
Abderrazzak MANY
amany at messel.emse.fr
Wed Aug 13 10:07:23 CEST 2008
Thank you for your answer.
Actually, I've tried with this function where I added the # symbol
between the date:
GetReturn<-function(code,date)
{
db<-"C:/Test.mdb"
channel<-odbcConnectAccess(db)
ssql<-paste("select * from tblCalendarDate Where CalendarID
=",code,"and DateRebal=
#",date,"#")
print(ssql) # so as i can see what ssql contains
mydata<-sqlQuery(channel,ssql)
mydata
}
GetReturn(1,"2007-01-10")
And it works when I run simply the command GetReturn(1,"2007-03-01")
"Samuel Bächler" <linux at boeser.ch> a écrit :
> Hi Many
>> GetReturn<-function(code,date)
>> {
>> db<-"C:/Test.mdb"
>> channel<-odbcConnectAccess(db)
>> ssql<-paste("select * from tblCalendarDate Where CalendarID
>> =",code,"and DateRebal >=",date)
>> print(ssql) # so as i can see what ssql contains
>> mydata<-sqlQuery(channel,ssql)
>> mydata
>> }
> [snip]
>
>> This is the content of my table tblCalendarDate:
>> CalendarID DateRebal
>> 1 29/09/2006
>> 1 10/10/2006
>> 1 20/10/2006
>> 1 31/10/2006
>> 1 10/11/2006
>> 1 20/11/2006
>>
>> Actually, the channel is open but the query on the table did not
>> perform the query correctly, here is the
>> result of the function when i run GetReturn(1,"2007-03-01") for example:
> Something with the formatting of the date goes wrong as I think. In
> the table tblCalendarDate you have it
> like *29/09/2006* but in your function you have it as
> *"2007-03-01"*. Dig deeper by experimenting with
> the dates format. You can experiment in Access itself to see what
> kind of dates Access accepts.
>
> s.
>
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