Datetime Conversion Functions - Amazon Kinesis Data Analytics SQL Reference

Datetime Conversion Functions

You specify date and time formats using patterned letters. Date and time pattern strings use unquoted letters from 'A' to 'Z' and from 'a' to 'z', with each letter representing a formatting element.

For more information, see Class SimpleDateFormat on the Oracle website.

Note

If you include other characters, they will be incorporated into the output string during formatting or compared to the input string during parsing.

The pattern letters in the following table are defined (all other characters from 'A' to 'Z' and from 'a' to 'z' are reserved).

Letter Date or Time Component Presentation Examples

y

Year

Year

yyyy; yy 2018;18

Y

Week year

Year

YYYY; YY 2009; 09

M

Month in year

Month

MMM;MM;MM July; Jul; 07

w

Week in year

Number

ww; 27

W

Week in month

Number

W 2

D

Day in year

Number

DDD 321

d

Day in month

Number

dd 10

F

Day of week in month

Number

F 2

E

Day name in week

Text

Tuesday; Tue

u

Day number of week (1 = Monday, ..., 7 = Sunday)

Number

1

a

Am/pm marker

Text

PM

H

Hour in day (0-23)

Number

0

k

Hour in day (1-24)

Number

24

K

Hour in am/pm (0-11)

Number

0

h

Hour in am/pm (1-12)

Number

12

m

Minute in hour

Number

30

s

Second in minute

Number

55

S

Millisecond

Number

978

z

Time zone

General time zone

Pacific Standard Time; PST; GMT-08:00

Z

Time zone

RFC 822 time zone

-0800

X

Time zone

ISO 8601 time zone

-08; -0800; -08:00

You determine the exact presentation by repeating pattern letters, along the lines of YYYY.

Text

If the number of repeated pattern letters is 4 or more, the full form is used; otherwise a short or abbreviated form is used if available. For parsing, both forms are accepted, independent of the number of pattern letters.

Number

For formatting, the number of pattern letters is the minimum number of digits, and shorter numbers are zero-padded to this amount. For parsing, the number of pattern letters is ignored unless it's needed to separate two adjacent fields.

Year

If the formatter's Calendar is the Gregorian calendar, the following rules are applied.

  • For formatting, if the number of pattern letters is 2, the year is truncated to 2 digits; otherwise it is interpreted as a number.

  • For parsing, if the number of pattern letters is more than 2, the year is interpreted literally, regardless of the number of digits. So using the pattern "MM/dd/yyyy", "01/11/12" parses to Jan 11, 12 A.D.

For parsing with the abbreviated year pattern ("y" or "yy"), SimpleDateFormat must interpret the abbreviated year relative to some century. It does this by adjusting dates to be within 80 years before and 20 years after the time the SimpleDateFormat instance is created. For example, using a pattern of "MM/dd/yy" and a SimpleDateFormat instance created on Jan 1, 2018, the string "01/11/12" would be interpreted as Jan 11, 2012 while the string "05/04/64" would be interpreted as May 4, 1964. During parsing, only strings consisting of exactly two digits, as defined by Character.isDigit(char), will be parsed into the default century. Any other numeric string, such as a one digit string, a three or more digit string, or a two digit string that isn't all digits (for example, "-1"), is interpreted literally. So "01/02/3" or "01/02/003" are parsed, using the same pattern, as Jan 2, 3 AD. Likewise, "01/02/-3" is parsed as Jan 2, 4 BC.

Otherwise, calendar system specific forms are applied. For both formatting and parsing, if the number of pattern letters is 4 or more, a calendar specific long form is used. Otherwise, a calendar specific short or abbreviated form is used.