To get yesterday's date, you need to subtract one day from today's date. Use GETDATE() to get today's date (the type is datetime ) and cast it to date . In SQL Server, you can subtract or add any number of days using the DATEADD() function. The DATEADD() function takes three arguments: datepart , number , and date .
To get yesterday's date, you need to subtract one day from today's date. Use CURDATE() to get today's date. In MySQL, you can subtract any date interval using the DATE_SUB() function. Here, since you need to subtract one day, you use DATE_SUB(CURDATE(), INTERVAL 1 DAY) to get yesterday's date.
SQL Server LAG() is a window function that provides access to a row at a specified physical offset which comes before the current row. In other words, by using the LAG() function, from the current row, you can access data of the previous row, or the row before the previous row, and so on.
You can use DATE() from MySQL to select records with a particular date. The syntax is as follows. SELECT *from yourTableName WHERE DATE(yourDateColumnName)='anyDate'; To understand the above syntax, let us first create a table.
get today no time:
SELECT dateadd(day,datediff(day,0,GETDATE()),0)
get yestersday no time:
SELECT dateadd(day,datediff(day,1,GETDATE()),0)
query for all of rows from only yesterday:
select
*
from yourTable
WHERE YourDate >= dateadd(day,datediff(day,1,GETDATE()),0)
AND YourDate < dateadd(day,datediff(day,0,GETDATE()),0)
To get the "today" value in SQL:
convert(date, GETDATE())
To get "yesterday":
DATEADD(day, -1, convert(date, GETDATE()))
To get "today minus X days": change the -1 into -X.
So for all yesterday's rows, you get:
select * from tablename
where date >= DATEADD(day, -1, convert(date, GETDATE()))
and date < convert(date, GETDATE())
It's seems the obvious answer was missing. To get all data from a table (Ttable) where the column (DatetimeColumn) is a datetime with a timestamp the following query can be used:
SELECT * FROM Ttable
WHERE DATEDIFF(day,Ttable.DatetimeColumn ,GETDATE()) = 1 -- yesterday
This can easily be changed to today, last month, last year, etc.
SELECT * from table_name where date_field = DATE_SUB(CURRENT_DATE(),INTERVAL 1 DAY);
Its a really old thread, but here is my take on it. Rather than 2 different clauses, one greater than and less than. I use this below syntax for selecting records from A date. If you want a date range then previous answers are the way to go.
SELECT * FROM TABLE_NAME WHERE
DATEDIFF(DAY, DATEADD(DAY, X , CURRENT_TIMESTAMP), <column_name>) = 0
In the above case X will be -1 for yesterday's records
This should do it:
WHERE `date` = CURDATE() - INTERVAL 1 DAY
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