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- windows - What does %date:~-4,4%%date:~-10,2%%date:~-7,2%_%time:~0,2% . . .
The above command line defines an environment variable with name fileName starting with fixed string db_, appending with %date:~-4,4% the last four characters of the current locale date which is obviously the year, appending with %date:~-10,2% the tenth and ninth characters from right side of the current locale date which is most likely the month,
- SQL query to select dates between two dates - Stack Overflow
I have a start_date and end_date I want to get the list of dates in between these two dates Can anyone help me pointing the mistake in my query select Date,TotalAllowance from Calculation where
- Pandas astype with date (or datetime) - Stack Overflow
df = df astype({'date': 'datetime64[ns]'}) worked by the way I think that must have considerable built-in ability for different date formats, year first or last, two or four digit year I just saw 64 ns and thought it wanted the time in nanoseconds
- bash - YYYY-MM-DD format date in shell script - Stack Overflow
I tried using $(date) in my bash shell script, however, I want the date in YYYY-MM-DD format How do I get this?
- What is this date format? 2011-08-12T20:17:46. 384Z
java text ParseException: Unparseable date: "2011-08-12T20:17:46 384Z" I think I should be using SimpleDateFormat for parsing, but I have to know the format string first
- What does this format mean T00:00:00. 000Z? - Stack Overflow
can you tell me how can we convert back to the original date version T00:00:00 000Z from the formated date version?
- Comparing Dates in Oracle SQL - Stack Overflow
The ANSI date literals is really a concise way comparing having to type TO_DATE and Date-Format every time Good for LAZY developers like me One thing to Notice is the DATE 2016-04-01 means 2016-04-01 00:00:00 really And I think this syntax works since Oracle 9i as this is where ANSI-SQL syntax was introduced into Oracle
- How do I format a date in JavaScript? - Stack Overflow
How do I format a Javascript Date object as a string? (Preferable format: 10-Aug-2010)
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