| Posted by Tony Rogerson on 08/27/07 12:32 
> That's funny -- here in sunny Austin I get the right answer with my> connection settings.  Moral to the story "Think globally (i.e. ISO)
 > and act locally (i.e  fix your dialect and proprietary setting)" to
 > paraphrase the Greens.
 
 I see, with YOUR regional settings it works - well that explains it all.
 
 The rest of the planet should adopt Texas Regional settings I guess then.
 
 Perhaps you should alter your statement about regional settings and people
 letting the client sort it out then...
 
 This issue is a good marker as to just how professional you really are; now
 you know that use the date format YYYY-MM-DD cannot be trusted in SQL
 Server, will you keep preaching the use of it?
 
 Or will you use the ISO compliant YYYY-MM-DDT00:00:00 or YYYYMMDD instead?
 
 I look forward to seeing that over the coming months.
 
 --
 Tony Rogerson, SQL Server MVP
 http://sqlblogcasts.com/blogs/tonyrogerson
 [Ramblings from the field from a SQL consultant]
 http://sqlserverfaq.com
 [UK SQL User Community]
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