I am creating a calendar table for my warehouse. I will use this as a foreign key for all date fields.
The code below creates a table and populates it. I managed to figure out how to find Memorial Day (last Monday of May) and Labor Day (first Monday of September).
SET NOCOUNT ON
DROP Table dbo.Calendar
GO
Create Table dbo.Calendar
(
CalendarId Integer NOT NULL,
DateValue Date NOT NULL,
DayNumberOfWeek Integer NOT NULL,
NameOfDay VarChar (10) NOT NULL,
NameOfMonth VarChar (10) NOT NULL,
WeekOfYear Integer NOT NULL,
JulianDay Integer NOT NULL,
USAIsBankHoliday Bit NOT NULL,
USADayName VarChar (100) NULL,
)
ALTER TABLE dbo.Calendar ADD CONSTRAINT
DF_Calendar_USAIsBankHoliday DEFAULT 0 FOR USAIsBankHoliday
GO
ALTER TABLE dbo.Calendar ADD CONSTRAINT
DF_Calendar_USADayName DEFAULT '' FOR USADayName
GO
Declare @StartDate DateTime = '01/01/2000'
Declare @EndDate DateTime = '01/01/2020'
While @StartDate < @EndDate
Begin
INSERT INTO dbo.Calendar
(
CalendarId,
DateValue,
WeekOfYear,
DayNumberOfWeek,
NameOfDay,
NameOfMonth,
JulianDay
)
Values
(
YEAR (@StartDate) * 10000 + MONTH (@StartDate) * 100 + Day (@StartDate),
@StartDate,
DATEPART (ww, @StartDate),
DATEPART (dw, @StartDate),
DATENAME (dw, @StartDate),
DATENAME (M, @StartDate),
DATEPART (dy, @StartDate)
)
Set @StartDate += 1
End
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USAIsBankHoliday = 1, USADayName += 'Weekend, ' WHERE DayNumberOfWeek IN (1, 7)
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USAIsBankHoliday = 1, USADayName += 'New Year' Day, ' WHERE (CalendarId % 2000) IN (101)
-- memorial day (last Monday in May)
UPDATE dbo.Calendar
SET USAIsBankHoliday = 1,
USADayName += 'Memorial Day, '
WHERE 1=1
AND CalendarId IN
(
SELECT MAX (CalendarId)
FROM dbo.Calendar
WHERE MONTH (DateValue) = 5
AND DATEPART (DW, DateValue)=2
GROUP BY YEAR (datevalue)
)
-- independence day
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USAIsBankHoliday = 1, USADayName += 'Independence Day, ' WHERE (CalendarId % 2000) IN (704)
-- labor day (first Monday in September)
UPDATE dbo.Calendar
SET USAIsBankHoliday = 1,
USADayName += 'Labor Day, '
WHERE 1=1
AND CalendarId IN
(
SELECT MIN (CalendarId)
FROM dbo.Calendar
WHERE MONTH (DateValue) = 9
AND DATEPART (DW, DateValue)=2
GROUP BY YEAR (datevalue)
)
-- thanksgiving day (fourth Thursday in November)
UPDATE dbo.Calendar
SET USAIsBankHoliday = 1,
USADayName += 'Thanksgiving Day, '
WHERE 1=1
AND CalendarId IN
(
SELECT Max (CalendarId)
FROM dbo.Calendar
WHERE MONTH (DateValue) = 11
AND DATEPART (DW, DateValue)=5
GROUP BY YEAR (datevalue)
)
-- christmas
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USAIsBankHoliday = 1, USADayName += 'Christmas Day, ' WHERE (CalendarId % 2000) IN (1225)
--=========================== Other named days
-- new years eve
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USADayName += 'New Year' Eve, ' WHERE (CalendarId % 2000) IN (1231)
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USADayName += 'Christmas Eve, ' WHERE (CalendarId % 2000) IN (1224)
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USADayName += 'Boxing Day, ' WHERE (CalendarId % 2000) IN (1226)
UPDATE dbo.Calendar SET USADayName = SubString (USADayName, 1, LEN (USADayName) -1) WHERE LEN (USADayName) > 2
SELECT * FROM dbo.Calendar
I'm puzzled thinking about Thanksgiving (Thursday of the last full week of November).
Edit:
Correction based on John Sauer comment
Thanksgiving is the fourth Thursday of November. However, checking for several years, I found that it was also the Thursday of the last full week of November.