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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T15:43:18+00:00 2026-05-12T15:43:18+00:00

Using SQL Server 2000: SELECT PERSONID, CARDEVENTDATE, INTIME, CASE WHEN OUTTIME = INTIME THEN

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Using SQL Server 2000:

SELECT PERSONID, 
       CARDEVENTDATE, 
       INTIME, 
       CASE 
         WHEN OUTTIME = INTIME THEN 
           'No PunchOut' 
         ELSE 
            OUTTIME 
       END AS OUTTIME, 
       CONVERT(char(8), CASE 
                          WHEN DateAdd(Day, - DateDiff(Day, 0, OutTime), OutTime) > '18:00:00' THEN 
                            Cast('18:00:00' AS datetime) 
                          ELSE 
                            DateAdd(Day, - DateDiff(Day, 0, OutTime), OutTime) 
                        END - CASE 
                                WHEN DateAdd(Day, - DateDiff(Day, 0, InTime), InTime) < '09:00:00' THEN 
                                  Cast('09:00:00' AS datetime) 
                                ELSE 
                                  DateAdd(Day, - DateDiff(Day, 0, InTime), InTime) 
                              END, 8) AS WorkTime
  FROM (SELECT T_PERSON.PERSONID,
               T_CARDEVENT.CARDEVENTDATE, 
               MIN(T_CARDEVENT.CARDEVENTTIME) AS INTIME, 
               MAX(T_CARDEVENT.CARDEVENTTIME) AS OUTTIME
          FROM T_PERSON 
    INNER JOIN T_CARDEVENT ON T_PERSON.PERSONID = T_CARDEVENT.PERSONID 
      GROUP BY T_PERSON.PERSONID, T_CARDEVENT.CARDEVENTDATE) DERIVEDTBL

T_cardevent.cardeventtime column datatype is Varchar.

In table Cardeventtime values are 080002, 091235…. so on…,

When I executing the above query it showing Arithmetic Express Overflow error for converting expression to datatype Datetime.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T15:43:18+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 3:43 pm

    So this “080002” stands for? 8 hours, 0 minutes, 2 seconds?

    This is definitely not a valid DATETIME format out of the box – and it doesn’t comply with any of the valid SQL Server CONVERT styles, either.

    So you’ll have to do some conversions yourself, manually. Is there any chance you could wrap the table with this column into a view which could handle the conversion?

    You’d have to do something along the lines of:

      CONVERT(DATETIME, SUBSTRING(CardEventTime, 1, 2) + ':' + 
                        SUBSTRING(CardEventTime, 3, 2) + ':' +
                        SUBSTRING(CardEventTime, 5, 2), 8)
    

    and this should turn your “080002” into “08:00:02” which can then be converted to a DATETIME (no separate time datatype until SQL Server 2008) using the style no. 8 (hh:mm:ss).

    Marc

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