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Reply to: Midnight 12:00am or 12:00pm
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Previously on "Midnight 12:00am or 12:00pm"
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Since an instance in time lasts only an instance (or possibly 5.39121 x 10^-44 seconds), it's never (or only extremely briefly) exactly midnight. Therefore any time you're likely to measure is either before midnight (up to 23:59:59.999999999999999999 ) or after (from 00:00:00:000...001). So it should be 12:00am.
I think the convention is that is 12:00am - which is the consensus here. If that causes problems then use the 24 hour clock. According to wikipedia (yeah yeah) 24:00 is ok.
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Neither. It's 12 noon or 12 midnight. If you must choose it's AM since it's 00.00 not 24:00 and it's the start of a new day.
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Originally posted by Spacecadet View PostI've always thought it was 12am
SQL Server treats it as AM:
select convert(varchar, cast('20080101' as datetime), 109)
Jan 1 2008 12:00:00:000AM
Then it's wrong. Midnight cannot be after midnight. It's 12pm, everything else is illogical. Spock will back me up...
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Originally posted by PAH View PostSo does 11pm come before or after midnight.
12 midnight = 00:00 hours and is the start of a new day
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostWhich is it?
I think the former
SQL Server treats it as AM:
select convert(varchar, cast('20080101' as datetime), 109)
Jan 1 2008 12:00:00:000AM
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Midnight 12:00am or 12:00pm
38am92.11%35pm7.89%3Which is it?
I think the former
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