Hi,
I need the timestamp in the below format:
2014-09-08-21.45.08.520676
The data part can be obtained by using the data functions and the time using time functions. But i am unable to get the microseconds.
Can someone help me out here with this.
Thanks in advance.
That is no time it is datetime in SAS words. The timestap is probably coming from a DBMS or OS conventions.
The datetime in SAS are integers measured in seconds fraction of seconds are you microseconds.
Do you want that as string printed out use Formats: SAS(R) 9.4 Formats and Informats: Reference
Do you want to have a conversion, let the conversion do the work.
What is your problem?
TimeW.D can display decimal .
data have; input time stimer12.; format time time12.2; cards; 09:02:12 05:04:19.21 ; run;
Xia Keshan
Hi:
I use a custom date time format like this:
proc format;
picture mydtss low-high = '%Y-%0m-%0d-%0H.%0M.%0S' (datatype=datetime);
run;
***************************************************************************************;
data stuff;
a=datetime();
put a 22.2 +5 a mydtss.;
run;
Gives me: 1727341907.42 2014-09-26-09.11.47
You may need to play with it a bit to get all the decimal places for the seconds.
As stated before there is the datetime value in SAS.
See Log from SAS program
39 %put NOTE: &=sysvlong &=sysscpl %sysfunc(datetime(), 20.6);
NOTE: SYSVLONG=9.04.01M2P072314 SYSSCPL=X64_7PRO 1727371518.875000
As you see running on windows you get down to milliseconds but not more, might be different on Unix/Linux, can not test now
Bruno
Message was edited by: Bruno Müller
result from running in the SAS University Edition
41 %put NOTE: &=sysvlong &=sysscpl %sysfunc(datetime(), 20.8);
NOTE: SYSVLONG=9.04.01M1P120413 SYSSCPL=Linux 1727351691.72906000
You may find this thread useful. Based on my experiments, I would use datetimes if I did not need precisions higher than milliseconds. If you need microseconds, I would separate the date part from the time part, which essentially gives you 16 bytes (8 for date [more than you need] + 8 for time [precision to nanoseconds, if you need it]).
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