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- windows - What does %date:~-4,4%%date:~-10,2%%date:~-7,2%_%time:~0,2% . . .
The above command line defines an environment variable with name fileName starting with fixed string db_, appending with %date:~-4,4% the last four characters of the current locale date which is obviously the year, appending with %date:~-10,2% the tenth and ninth characters from right side of the current locale date which is most likely the month,
- Delete all old emails after a certain date - Gmail Community
Delete all old emails after a certain date I have too many emails How do I delete all those older than a certain date? I haven't tried anything because I can't keep selecting and deleting 10,000 old emails
- Convert date to datetime in Python - Stack Overflow
Is there a built-in method for converting a date to a datetime in Python, for example getting the datetime for the midnight of the given date? The opposite conversion is easy: datetime has a date()
- Pandas astype with date (or datetime) - Stack Overflow
date If you want to cast into date, then you can first cast to datetime64[ns] and then use dt date to get a column of datetime date objects:
- bash - YYYY-MM-DD format date in shell script - Stack Overflow
I tried using $(date) in my bash shell script, however, I want the date in YYYY-MM-DD format How do I get this?
- Keep only date part when using pandas. to_datetime
Just giving a more up to date answer in case someone sees this old post Adding "utc=False" when converting to datetime will remove the timezone component and keep only the date in a datetime64 [ns] data type
- sql - How to insert date values into table - Stack Overflow
A DATE data type contains both date and time elements If you are not concerned about the time portion, then you could also use the ANSI Date literal which uses a fixed format 'YYYY-MM-DD' and is NLS independent
- Change Date Format (DD MM YYYY) in SQL SELECT Statement
If the datatype is date(time), the format shown is dependant on your local settings Dates don't have an inherent format If you want to display a particular format
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