Upload and read dataset SAS - SQL Server
I am uploading a dataset to MS SQL server, and I did it in two ways
first one:
proc sql;
create table lib.dataset as
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
Quit;
Here date format is YYMMDD10.
All went well, and date format also looks good on SQL server. However When i access the same from SAS, the date format changes to Date9.
2.I created the table directly on SQL server
create table dbo.dataset
(
ID char(11) NOT NULL,
date_reg date,
);
And then inserted the values from SAS
proc sql;
insert into lib.dataset
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
quit;
all went well, but again the same problem when I access the data from SAS, the date format changes from YYMMDD10. to Date9,
How can I get the same format as of in the SQL Server.
the libname I use is
libname lib odbc noprompt="dsn=myserver; database=dab" schema=dbo
bulkload=yes;
sql sas odbc
add a comment |
I am uploading a dataset to MS SQL server, and I did it in two ways
first one:
proc sql;
create table lib.dataset as
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
Quit;
Here date format is YYMMDD10.
All went well, and date format also looks good on SQL server. However When i access the same from SAS, the date format changes to Date9.
2.I created the table directly on SQL server
create table dbo.dataset
(
ID char(11) NOT NULL,
date_reg date,
);
And then inserted the values from SAS
proc sql;
insert into lib.dataset
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
quit;
all went well, but again the same problem when I access the data from SAS, the date format changes from YYMMDD10. to Date9,
How can I get the same format as of in the SQL Server.
the libname I use is
libname lib odbc noprompt="dsn=myserver; database=dab" schema=dbo
bulkload=yes;
sql sas odbc
1
Why does it matter? Formats only control appearances, it doesn't change the usage in any manner.
– Reeza
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
you are right.. it doesn't matter much. just wanted to know if there is a way for this.
– Anand
Nov 21 '18 at 8:47
But is there a way?
– Anand
Nov 28 '18 at 13:35
AFAIK, no there is no way. SAS does automatic assumptions when hitting a SQL data base.
– Reeza
Nov 28 '18 at 16:11
add a comment |
I am uploading a dataset to MS SQL server, and I did it in two ways
first one:
proc sql;
create table lib.dataset as
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
Quit;
Here date format is YYMMDD10.
All went well, and date format also looks good on SQL server. However When i access the same from SAS, the date format changes to Date9.
2.I created the table directly on SQL server
create table dbo.dataset
(
ID char(11) NOT NULL,
date_reg date,
);
And then inserted the values from SAS
proc sql;
insert into lib.dataset
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
quit;
all went well, but again the same problem when I access the data from SAS, the date format changes from YYMMDD10. to Date9,
How can I get the same format as of in the SQL Server.
the libname I use is
libname lib odbc noprompt="dsn=myserver; database=dab" schema=dbo
bulkload=yes;
sql sas odbc
I am uploading a dataset to MS SQL server, and I did it in two ways
first one:
proc sql;
create table lib.dataset as
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
Quit;
Here date format is YYMMDD10.
All went well, and date format also looks good on SQL server. However When i access the same from SAS, the date format changes to Date9.
2.I created the table directly on SQL server
create table dbo.dataset
(
ID char(11) NOT NULL,
date_reg date,
);
And then inserted the values from SAS
proc sql;
insert into lib.dataset
select ID, date_reg from havingdata
;
quit;
all went well, but again the same problem when I access the data from SAS, the date format changes from YYMMDD10. to Date9,
How can I get the same format as of in the SQL Server.
the libname I use is
libname lib odbc noprompt="dsn=myserver; database=dab" schema=dbo
bulkload=yes;
sql sas odbc
sql sas odbc
asked Nov 20 '18 at 16:22
AnandAnand
62
62
1
Why does it matter? Formats only control appearances, it doesn't change the usage in any manner.
– Reeza
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
you are right.. it doesn't matter much. just wanted to know if there is a way for this.
– Anand
Nov 21 '18 at 8:47
But is there a way?
– Anand
Nov 28 '18 at 13:35
AFAIK, no there is no way. SAS does automatic assumptions when hitting a SQL data base.
– Reeza
Nov 28 '18 at 16:11
add a comment |
1
Why does it matter? Formats only control appearances, it doesn't change the usage in any manner.
– Reeza
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
you are right.. it doesn't matter much. just wanted to know if there is a way for this.
– Anand
Nov 21 '18 at 8:47
But is there a way?
– Anand
Nov 28 '18 at 13:35
AFAIK, no there is no way. SAS does automatic assumptions when hitting a SQL data base.
– Reeza
Nov 28 '18 at 16:11
1
1
Why does it matter? Formats only control appearances, it doesn't change the usage in any manner.
– Reeza
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
Why does it matter? Formats only control appearances, it doesn't change the usage in any manner.
– Reeza
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
you are right.. it doesn't matter much. just wanted to know if there is a way for this.
– Anand
Nov 21 '18 at 8:47
you are right.. it doesn't matter much. just wanted to know if there is a way for this.
– Anand
Nov 21 '18 at 8:47
But is there a way?
– Anand
Nov 28 '18 at 13:35
But is there a way?
– Anand
Nov 28 '18 at 13:35
AFAIK, no there is no way. SAS does automatic assumptions when hitting a SQL data base.
– Reeza
Nov 28 '18 at 16:11
AFAIK, no there is no way. SAS does automatic assumptions when hitting a SQL data base.
– Reeza
Nov 28 '18 at 16:11
add a comment |
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1
Why does it matter? Formats only control appearances, it doesn't change the usage in any manner.
– Reeza
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
you are right.. it doesn't matter much. just wanted to know if there is a way for this.
– Anand
Nov 21 '18 at 8:47
But is there a way?
– Anand
Nov 28 '18 at 13:35
AFAIK, no there is no way. SAS does automatic assumptions when hitting a SQL data base.
– Reeza
Nov 28 '18 at 16:11