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DateAdd
By Richard Rost   Richard Rost on LinkedIn Email Richard Rost   4 years ago

Use the DateAdd Function to Add Whole Calendar Months


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In this Microsoft Access tutorial, I will teach you how to use the DateAdd function in Microsoft Access to add or subtract whole days, months, years, hours, minutes, seconds, weeks, or quarters from any date.

Coen from Glendale AZ (a Silver Member) asks: how do I determine what date is exactly six months in the future from a specific date? I can't just add 180 days. It's for a warranty program, so it needs to be exactly six calendar months. Furthermore, if the warranty happens to expire on the weekend, we give them until the following Monday to come in for service. How can I handle that?

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I'll show you how to handle part two of the question: if the warranty ends on a weekend, move the date up to Monday. Also, I'll show you how to put "WARRANTY EXPIRED" in big red & yellow letters right on the customer form.

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Format

     DateAdd("interval", number, date)

     yyyy      Years
     q         Quarters
     m         Months
     d         Days
     ww        Weeks
     h         Hours
     n         Minutes
     s         Seconds

     X = DateAdd("m", 1, #1/1/2021#)

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Comments for DateAdd
 
Age Subject From
2 yearsDateAdd in Calculated FieldsKent Jamison

 

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Copyright 2024 by Computer Learning Zone, Amicron, and Richard Rost. All Rights Reserved. Current Time: 3/28/2024 10:03:47 AM. PLT: 0s
Keywords: TechHelp Access dateadd, add one month, subtract one month, whole month, six months, next month, last month, previous month, years, quarters, months, days, weeks, hours, minutes, seconds, weekday  PermaLink  DateAdd in Microsoft Access