Thanks Jacques !

-James


> On Jul 31, 2015, at 09:48, Jason Altekruse <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> You also could use the date-part function.
> 
> http://drill.apache.org/docs/date-time-functions-and-arithmetic/#date_part-syntax
> 
> On Fri, Jul 31, 2015 at 9:47 AM, Jacques Nadeau <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> I would think you could cast to time and then provide a time boundary.
>> 
>> I don't remember the exact syntax but something like WHERE CAST(`time` as
>> TIME) > TIME '18:00:00' and CAST(`time` as TIME) < TIME '23:00:00'
>> 
>> --
>> Jacques Nadeau
>> CTO and Co-Founder, Dremio
>> 
>> On Fri, Jul 31, 2015 at 9:29 AM, James Sun <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>>> 
>>> Hi,
>>> 
>>> I have a week worth of data in a view and there is already a date
>> column:
>>> select `time` from dfs.views.`mytbl` limit 5;
>>> +------------------------+
>>> |          time          |
>>> +------------------------+
>>> | 2011-04-24 22:21:19.0  |
>>> | 2011-04-24 22:21:24.0  |
>>> | 2011-04-24 22:21:28.0  |
>>> | 2011-04-24 22:21:33.0  |
>>> | 2011-04-24 22:21:38.0  |
>>> +------------------------+
>>> 5 rows selected (0.256 seconds)
>>> 
>>> Now if I want to query from time 18:00:00 to 23:00:00 on every day, what
>>> would be a good way to do it?
>>> 
>>> Thanks
>>> 
>>> -James
>> 

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