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Home/ Questions/Q 5947303
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T16:56:41+00:00 2026-05-22T16:56:41+00:00

Currently I’m comparing short dates this way: CONVERT(datetime,CONVERT(VARCHAR(10), return_date,101)) = ‘{0}’ My supervisor says

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Currently I’m comparing short dates this way:

CONVERT(datetime,CONVERT(VARCHAR(10), return_date,101)) = '{0}'

My supervisor says that I should do it this way:

datepart(month,return_date)= 5   
and  datepart(day,return_date)=24   
and  datepart(year,return_date)=2011 

because the defined value 101 recognized by the function CONVERT might change in the future. Is that true? How often do these parameter values change? Have the changed in the past? Is there an even better way to compare the short form of dates?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T16:56:42+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 4:56 pm

    If by “short dates” you mean “just the date without the time”

    Select ...
    From MyTable
    Where return_date >= '20110524'
        And return_date < DateAdd(d, 1, '20110524')
    

    First, note the < in the second part of the Where clause. Second, if there is an index on return_date, this approach will use it. Another solution which would not utilize an index (and thus result in a table scan) would be:

    Select ...
    From MyTable
    Where DateAdd(d, DateDiff(d, 0, return_date), 0) = '20110524'
    

    If return_date is always stored without its time component (i.e., its time component is always midnight) then you can do a simple comparison:

    Select ...
    From MyTable
    Where return_date = '20110524'
    
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