Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
80 lines (58 loc) · 2.13 KB

File metadata and controls

80 lines (58 loc) · 2.13 KB
description Date, Time, and Timestamp Escape Sequences
title Date, Time, and Timestamp Escape Sequences | Microsoft Docs
ms.custom
ms.date 01/19/2017
ms.prod sql
ms.prod_service connectivity
ms.reviewer
ms.technology connectivity
ms.topic reference
helpviewer_keywords
escape sequences [ODBC]
escape sequences [ODBC], about escape sequences
ODBC escape sequences [ODBC], about escape sequences
ODBC escape sequences [ODBC]
ms.assetid 67b7dee0-e5b1-4469-a626-0c7767852b80
author David-Engel
ms.author v-daenge

Date, Time, and Timestamp Escape Sequences

ODBC defines escape sequences for date, time, and timestamp literals. The syntax of these escape sequences is as follows:

  
{d 'value'}  
{t 'value'}  
{ts 'value'}  

In BNF notation, the syntax is as follows:

ODBC-date-time-escape ::=  
     ODBC-date-escape  
     | ODBC-time-escape  
     | ODBC-timestamp-escape

ODBC-date-escape ::=  
     ODBC-esc-initiator d 'date-value' ODBC-esc-terminator

ODBC-time-escape ::=  
     ODBC-esc-initiator t 'time-value' ODBC-esc-terminator

ODBC-timestamp-escape ::=  
     ODBC-esc-initiator ts 'timestamp-value' ODBC-esc-terminator

ODBC-esc-initiator ::= {  

ODBC-esc-terminator ::= }  

date-value ::=   
     years-value date-separator months-value date-separator days-value

time-value ::=   
     hours-value time-separator minutes-value time-separator seconds-value

timestamp-value ::= date-value timestamp-separator time-value

date-separator ::= -  

time-separator ::= :  

timestamp-separator ::=  
     (The blank character)

years-value ::= digit digit digit digit

months-value ::= digit digit

days-value ::= digit digit

hours-value ::= digit digit

minutes-value ::= digit digit

seconds-value ::= digit digit[.digit...]  

Remarks

The date, time, and timestamp literal escape sequences are supported if the date, time, and timestamp data types are supported by the data source. An application should call SQLGetTypeInfo to determine whether these data types are supported.