I have recently been informed that the use of the BETWEEN method in SQL is somewhat unreliable, and I should therefore be using DATEDIFF(). However, another programmer has informed me this is not the case and the BETWEEN method works brilliantly in all cases as long as the date is formatted correctly.
Please could someone settle this debate by stating which method is better and why?
At the moment my date range SQL looks like this:
DATEDIFF(d,'01-Jan-1970',SIH.[Something_Date]) >= 0 AND DATEDIFF(d,'01-Jan-2013',SIH.[Something_Date]) <= 0
However, I would much rather write it like this if I can be sure it is reliable:
SIH.[Something_Date] BETWEEN '01-Jan-1970' AND '01-Jan-2013'
In this particular case I am using MsSQL, however, I have tagged MySQL as I would like to know if this applies here as well
Your two queries are not equivalent. The
datediffversion will include all values from01-Jan-2013regardless of time while the between version will include only the rows on01-Jan-2013where time is00:00:00.If you check against the range and don’t do any calculations on the column, your query will be able to use a index on
Something_Dateand at the same time include all values from01-Jan-2013regardless of the time part.