Page tree

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 10 Next »


Contents:

   

Contents:


Formats a specified Datetime set of values according to the specified date format. Source values can be a reference to a column containing Datetime values.
  • If the source Datetime value does not include a valid input for this function, a missing value is returned.
  • Designer Cloud supports a wide variety of formats for Datetime fields. For more information on supported date formats, see Datetime Data Type.
  • You can explore the available Datetime formats through the Transformer page. From a column's type drop-down, select Date/Time . Then, select the formatting category. From the displayed drop-down, you can select a specific format. When this transform step is added to your recipe, you can edit it to see how the format is specified in Wrangle.

For more information on formatting numeric types, see NUMFORMAT Function.

Wrangle vs. SQL: This function is part of Wrangle, a proprietary data transformation language. Wrangle is not SQL. For more information, see Wrangle Language.

Basic Usage

dateformat(MyDate, 'yyyy-MM-dd')


Output:
Returns the valid date values in the MyDate column converted to year-month-day format.

Syntax and Arguments

dateformat(Datetime_col, date_format_string)


ArgumentRequired?Data TypeDescription
Datetime_colYdatetimeName of column containing date values to be formatted
date_format_stringYstringString literal identifying the date format to apply to the value

For more information on syntax standards, see Language Documentation Syntax Notes.

datetime_col

Name of the column whose date data is to be formatted.

  • Missing values for this function in the source data result in missing values in the output.
  • Multiple columns and wildcards are not supported.

Usage Notes:

 

Required?Data TypeExample Value
YesDatetimemyDate

date_format_string

String value indicating the date format to apply to the input values.

Designer Cloud supports Java formatting strings, with some exceptions.

NOTE: If the platform cannot recognize the date format string, the generated result is written as a string value.

For more information on supported date formats, see Datetime Data Type.

  • Missing values for this function in the source data result in missing values in the output.
  • Multiple columns and wildcards are not supported.

Usage Notes:

Required?Data TypeExample Value
YesString'MM/dd/yyyy'

Examples


Tip: For additional examples, see Common Tasks.

Example - formatting date values

This example illustrates several ways of wrangling heterogeneous date values, including the use of the DATEFORMAT function.

Source:

Your dataset includes the following messy date values:

MyDate
2/1/00 9:20
4/5/10 11:25
6/7/99 22:00
12/20/1894 15:45:00
13/7/1999 22:00:00

Transformation:

When this data is loaded into the application, it is not immediately recognized as a Datetime column, as the variation among the data complicates deciding on the proper date format. The first three rows look to be in a consistent format, but the other two are problematic.

You can try to change the column to a Datetime type with a format that matches the first three rows. You can select the appropriate format through the type drop-down. When previewed, the transform looks like the following:

NOTE: Do not add this transform at this time. It is strictly used for reviewing the effects on data quality.

Transformation Name Change column data type
Parameter: Columns MyDate
Parameter: New type Custom or Date/Time
Parameter: Specify type 'mm-dd-yy hh:mm:ss','mm*dd*yy*HH:MM'

When the column is reformatted, you should notice that the last two values in the column are mismatched. In the column histogram, you can see that date ranges include the 1999 date in the third row, so the final row should work if it was a valid date.

The 1894 value looks like an outlier value and could be removed:

Transformation Name Filter rows
Parameter: Condition Custom formula
Parameter: Type of formula Custom single
Parameter: Condition matches([MyDate], `12/20/1894`)
Parameter: Action Delete matching rows

For the remaining 1999 row, you can delete it or use the following transforms to conform it to the other rows. Use the following transform to change the 13 month value to a 12:

Transformation Name Replace text or pattern
Parameter: Column MyDate
Parameter: Find `13/`
Parameter: Replace with '12\/'
Parameter: Match all occurrences true

The following two transforms complete the cleanup steps:

Transformation Name Replace text or pattern
Parameter: Column MyDate
Parameter: Find `/1999`
Parameter: Replace with '\/99'
Parameter: Match all occurrences true

Transformation Name Replace text or pattern
Parameter: Column MyDate
Parameter: Find `:#+:00`
Parameter: Replace with ':00'
Parameter: Match all occurrences true

If you apply the original formatting step, all dates are valid:

Transformation Name Change column data type
Parameter: Columns MyDate
Parameter: New type Custom or Date/Time
Parameter: Specify type 'mm-dd-yy hh:mm:ss','mm*dd*yy*HH:MM'

Now, your Datetime column can be formatted as needed using the dateformat function. The following step generates a new column that contains year, month, and day information as a single numeric value:

Transformation Name New formula
Parameter: Formula type Single row formula
Parameter: Formula dateformat(MyDate, 'yyyyMMdd')

Results:

The final dataset should look like the following:

MyDatedateformat_MyDate
2/1/00 9:2020000201
4/5/10 11:2520100405
6/7/99 22:0019990607
12/7/99 22:0019991207

Example - Other date formatting variations

Numeric date, year first

SourceTransformationResults

2/15/16 13:26:58.123

3/12/99 2:45:21.456

11/21/11 23:02:18.000

Transformation Name New formula
Parameter: Formula type Single row formula
Parameter: Formula dateformat(Timestamp,'yyyy-MM-dd')
Parameter: New column name 'newTimestamp'

2016-02-15

1999-03-12

2011-11-21

Numeric date, American style

SourceTransformationResults

2/15/16 13:26:58.123

3/12/99 2:45:21.456

11/21/11 23:02:18.000

Transformation Name New formula
Parameter: Formula type Single row formula
Parameter: Formula dateformat(Timestamp,'M/d/yy')
Parameter: New column name 'newTimestamp'

2/15/16

3/12/99

11/21/11

Full written date

SourceTransformationResults

2/15/16 13:26:58.123

3/12/99 2:45:21.456

11/21/11 23:02:18.000

Transformation Name New formula
Parameter: Formula type Single row formula
Parameter: Formula dateformat(Timestamp,'MMMM dd, yyyy')
Parameter: New column name 'newTimestamp'

February 15, 2016

March 12, 1999

November 21, 2011

Abbreviated date, including abbreviated day of week

SourceTransformationResults

2/15/16 13:26:58.123

3/12/99 2:45:21.456

11/21/11 23:02:18.000

Transformation Name New formula
Parameter: Formula type Single row formula
Parameter: Formula dateformat(Timestamp,'EEE MMM dd, yyyy')
Parameter: New column name 'newTimestamp'

Mon Feb 15, 2016

Fri Mar 12, 1999

Mon Nov 21, 2011

Full 24-hour time

SourceTransformationResults

2/15/16 13:26:58.123

3/12/99 2:45:21.456

11/21/11 23:02:18.000

Transformation Name New formula
Parameter: Formula type Single row formula
Parameter: Formula dateformat(Timestamp,'HH:mm:ss.SSS')
Parameter: New column name 'newTimestamp'

13:26:58.123

2:45:21.456

23:02:18.000

Twelve-hour time with AM/PM indicator


SourceTransformationResults

2/15/16 13:26:58.123

3/12/99 2:45:21.456

11/21/11 23:02:18.000

Transformation Name New formula
Parameter: Formula type Single row formula
Parameter: Formula dateformat(Timestamp,'h:mm:ss a')
Parameter: New column name 'newTimestamp'

NOTE: For this function, use of the lower-case hour indicator (h or hh) requires the use of an AM/PM indicator (a).

 

 

1:26:58 PM

2:45:21 AM

11:02:18 PM

For more information on supported date formats, see Datetime Data Type.

See Also for DATEFORMAT Function:

Error rendering macro 'contentbylabel'

parameters should not be empty

  • No labels

This page has no comments.