Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Generate Calendar menggunakan Function pada SQL SERVER

Kali ini saya membahas tentang bagaimana membuat kalender pada SQL Server tanpa membuat tabel baru. Sebelumnya saya membahas tentang penghitungan menggunakan function untuk menghitung jumlah hari tanpa menghitung weekend dan hari libur, Naaahhh... kali ini ga jauh beda.. Kita akan menggunakan function untuk membuatnya. langsung saja, pake jurus rahasia!!! Jalankan script dibawah ini :

CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[GenerateCalendar] 
        (
        @FromDate   DATETIME 
        ,@NoDays    INT   
        )
-- Generates a calendar table with sequential day numbering (@FromDate = SeqNo 1).
-- See RETURNS table (comments) for meaning of each column.
-- Notes:       1) Max for NoDays is 65536, which runs in just over 2 seconds.
--
-- Example calls to generate the calendar:
-- 1) Forward for 365 days starting today:
--             DECLARE @Date DATETIME
--             SELECT @Date = GETDATE()
--             SELECT * 
--             FROM dbo.GenerateCalendar(@Date, 365) 
--             ORDER BY SeqNo;
-- 2) Backwards for 365 days back starting today:
--             DECLARE @Date DATETIME
--             SELECT @Date = GETDATE()
--             SELECT * 
--             FROM dbo.GenerateCalendar(@Date, -365) 
--             ORDER BY SeqNo;
-- 3) For only the FromDate:
--             DECLARE @Date DATETIME
--             SELECT @Date = GETDATE()
--             SELECT * 
--             FROM dbo.GenerateCalendar(@Date, 1);
-- 4) Including only the last week days of each month:
--             Note: Seq no in this case are as if all dates were generated
--             DECLARE @Date DATETIME
--             SELECT @Date = GETDATE()
--             SELECT * 
--             FROM dbo.GenerateCalendar(@Date, 365) 
--             WHERE Last = 1 ORDER BY SeqNo;
RETURNS TABLE WITH SCHEMABINDING AS
 RETURN
--===== High speed code provided courtesy of SQL MVP Jeff Moden (idea by Dwain Camps)
--===== Generate sequence numbers from 1 to 65536 (credit to SQL MVP Itzik Ben-Gen)
   WITH  E1(N) AS (SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1), --2 rows
         E2(N) AS (SELECT 1 FROM E1 a, E1 b),    --4 rows
         E4(N) AS (SELECT 1 FROM E2 a, E2 b),    --16 rows
         E8(N) AS (SELECT 1 FROM E4 a, E4 b),    --256 rows
        E16(N) AS (SELECT 1 FROM E8 a, E8 b),    --65536 rows
   cteTally(N) AS (
SELECT TOP (ABS(@NoDays)) ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY (SELECT NULL)) FROM E16)
        -- [SeqNo]=Sequential day number (@FromDate always=1) forward or backwards
 SELECT [SeqNo]     = t.N,
        -- [Date]=Date (with 00:00:00.000 for the time component)                              
        [Date]      = dt.DT,  
        -- [Year]=Four digit year                                  
        [Year]      = dp.YY,
        -- [YrNN]=Two digit year                                    
        [YrNN]      = dp.YY % 100,
        -- [YYYYMM]=Integer YYYYMM (year * 100 + month)                              
        [YYYYMM]    = dp.YY * 100 + dp.MM,
        -- [BuddhaYr]=Year in Buddhist calendar                      
        [BuddhaYr]  = dp.YY + 543, 
        -- [Month]=Month (as an INT)                             
        [Month]     = dp.MM, 
        -- [Day]=Day (as an INT)                                   
        [Day]       = dp.DD,
        -- [WkDNo]=Week day number (based on @@DATEFIRST)                                    
        [WkDNo]     = DATEPART(dw,dt.DT),
        -- Next 3 columns dependent on language setting so may not work for non-English  
        -- [WkDName]=Full name of the week day, e.g., Monday, Tuesday, etc.                     
        [WkDName]   = CONVERT(NCHAR(9),dp.DW), 
        -- [WkDName2]=Two characters for the week day, e.g., Mo, Tu, etc.                 
        [WkDName2]  = CONVERT(NCHAR(2),dp.DW),  
        -- [WkDName3]=Three characters for the week day, e.g., Mon, Tue, etc.                
        [WkDName3]  = CONVERT(NCHAR(3),dp.DW),  
        -- [JulDay]=Julian day (day number of the year)                
        [JulDay]    = dp.DY,
        -- [JulWk]=Week number of the year                                    
        [JulWk]     = dp.DY/7+1,
        -- [WkNo]=Week number                                
        [WkNo]      = dp.DD/7+1,
        -- [Qtr]=Quarter number (of the year)                                
        [Qtr]       = DATEPART(qq,dt.Dt),                       
        -- [Last]=Number the weeks for the month in reverse      
        [Last]      = (DATEPART(dd,dp.LDtOfMo)-dp.DD)/7+1,
        -- [LdOfMo]=Last day of the month                  
        [LdOfMo]    = DATEPART(dd,dp.LDtOfMo),
        -- [LDtOfMo]=Last day of the month as a DATETIME
        [LDtOfMo]   = dp.LDtOfMo                                
   FROM cteTally t
  CROSS APPLY 
  ( --=== Create the date
        SELECT DT = DATEADD(dd,(t.N-1)*SIGN(@NoDays),@FromDate)
  ) dt
  CROSS APPLY 
  ( --=== Create the other parts from the date above using a "cCA"
    -- (Cascading CROSS APPLY (cCA), courtesy of Chris Morris)
        SELECT YY        = DATEPART(yy,dt.DT), 
                MM        = DATEPART(mm,dt.DT), 
                DD        = DATEPART(dd,dt.DT), 
                DW        = DATENAME(dw,dt.DT),
                Dy        = DATEPART(dy,dt.DT),
                LDtOfMo   = DATEADD(mm,DATEDIFF(mm,-1,dt.DT),-1)

  ) dp;

Setelah dijalankan, script di atas  akan membuat fungsi untuk meng-generate kalender, dengan fungsi tersebut kita bisa memanggil kapan saja dan memerintahkan SQL Server untuk membuat kalender.

Untuk memanggilnya kita tinggal jalankan Query terus tinggal dijadikan view dan bisa dipanggil kapan saja ;)

SELECT [Date], [Year], [YrNN], [YYYYMM], [BuddhaYr], [Month], [Day]
    ,[WkDNo], [WkDName], [WkDName2], [WkDName3], [JulDay], [JulWk]
    ,[WkNo], [Qtr], [Last], [LdOfMo], [LDtOfMo]
FROM dbo.GenerateCalendar('2010-01-01', 65536);



angka 65526 adalah angka contoh jumlah hari yang akan dipanggil
Script saya ambil  dari 
http://www.sqlservercentral.com/blogs/dwainsql/2014/03/30/calendar-tables-in-t-sql/
Jika ingin belajar lebih lanjut bisa mengakses link tersebut. Selamat bekerja! :)

No comments:

Post a Comment