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JHE
Obsidian | Level 7 JHE
Obsidian | Level 7

Two date as:

CLCL_PAID_DT=22NOV2017:00:00:00.000

CLCL_RECD_DT =12NOV2017:00:00:00.000

 

My code:

INTCK('DAY',t1.CLCL_PAID_DT,t1.CLCL_RECD_DT,'C') AS Age1,

DATDIF(t1.CLCL_PAID_DT,t1.CLCL_RECD_DT,'act/act') AS Age

 

but both without value. Why

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
ballardw
Super User

In SAS what you show is a DATETIME, not a DATE. This is a critical difference as dates use numbers of days as the interval and datetimes are numbers of seconds. Due to a number of issues the range of date values that work with the various functions are limited to dates before the year 20,000. Most datetimes, when treated as dates without conversion, vastly exceed that range.

 

Hence the options of the DTDay, DTMONTH and DTYear functions to address the increments of datetimes instead of dates so the proper conversion is used.

 

OR explicitly use the DATEPART of a datetime value.

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3 REPLIES 3
Reeza
Super User

I think the interval is DTDAY or DAYDT when dealing with date times?

ballardw
Super User

In SAS what you show is a DATETIME, not a DATE. This is a critical difference as dates use numbers of days as the interval and datetimes are numbers of seconds. Due to a number of issues the range of date values that work with the various functions are limited to dates before the year 20,000. Most datetimes, when treated as dates without conversion, vastly exceed that range.

 

Hence the options of the DTDay, DTMONTH and DTYear functions to address the increments of datetimes instead of dates so the proper conversion is used.

 

OR explicitly use the DATEPART of a datetime value.

JHE
Obsidian | Level 7 JHE
Obsidian | Level 7

Thank you,

INTCK('DTDAY',CLCL_RECD_DT,CLCL_PAID_DT)

 

works.

 

 

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