Context: I am using Microsoft Dynamics (CRM) and Eloqua to send email campaigns. I have a date field in CRM that I want to check against in Eloqua for a specific campaign. This campaign needs to check to see if the date field is <= today's date + 90 days. I am using the campaign UI in Eloqua, not doing anything programmatically at this point.
I have tried using the Compare Custom Object Fields decision in Eloqua by finding the date field, setting the comparator to dynamically on or before, and I want to make the compared value Today + 90 days. I'm not sure how to accomplish this in this type of Decision object because the only options I have to compare the date field to are Yesterday, Today, or Tomorrow. See image below:
I have also tried to use the Compare Date Decision object, but there is no dynamic comparison, just hard-coded date options.
The last thing I tried was a Wait step, but that only waits a hard-coded number of days rather than checking dynamically.
Has anyone run into this issue or know of a solution to this problem?
We were able to find an Eloqua Date App to download that adds a Date Decision step to the program builder which allowed us more flexibility with comparing dates in a custom range.
Related
My boss asked me to add a double slider input control for the date information on a report on Webi.
We have several columns and two of them display a date (start and end date of procedure). So I need to have two double slider, one for each date.
I've been searching for a whole day now and I know that it is not directly possible to use double slider with dates, because double slider only works with values (measures) and dates don't have that.
But I managed to create two more variables on the business layer. I used the following SQL function:
CAST(currentDate as Bigint))
These variables are displaying the date as numbers (e.g. 1090101 for 01.01.2009 (format is "dd-MM-yyyy")).
And it is working great! But it displays the dates as number, which is not possible to use for work. No one will know which date is 1090101. I could perhaps let both columns (date as date and date as number) in the report, so people could check the date they want to filter with the input control and select the right number on the slider. This could be a workaround, but not a clean one, I think.
I tried to change the format of the date as number to a date format, but then I could not use the slider anymore (even if the variable is a number).
I looked for a way to change the formatting of the values displayed on the slider, but with no luck.
So I'm asking for your help. Does anyone know how I could make this work?
Is there really no solutions for such a useful way of filtering data? I mean, filtering data by an interval of dates is surely something people want to do quite often, I assume.
Thank you in advance for your time.
(Version Webi : SAP BusinessObjects BI Platform 4.2 Support Pack 8 Patch 6,
Version: 14.2.8.3671)
You could format your date value as year, month, day and then convert it to a number so the value you are filtering on makes a little more sense. Like this...
=ToNumber(FormatDate([Your Date];"yyyyMMdd"))
It will be better than just an arbitrary number, but certainly not perfect since you will have large chunks of your range for which there never will be any corresponding data (e.g. 20211232 through 20220100).
What is wrong with just a Minimum and Maximum input controls? They are more intuitive and simple to create. Sometimes what your user or boss asks for is a bad idea and/or just not possible.
I am brand new to Dialogflow CX and am having trouble figuring out how to use a date in a condition. I want to require that a birthdate be entered and be greater than 2000-01-01. I have tried
$intent.params.dob.resolved > 2005-01-01
with and without quotes, but it does not work (always false). I discovered that $intent.params.dob.original > "1/1/01" is resolved as True for all dates, so that is of no help.
Is there a way that works?
To achieve your described use case, you can utilize the condition route or conditional response to return a response according to the condition. Here is a condition you may use:
$intent.params.birthdate.resolved.year > 2000 OR
($intent.params.birthdate.resolved.year = 2000 AND
$intent.params.birthdate.resolved.month > 1) OR
($intent.params.birthdate.resolved.year = 2000 AND
$intent.params.birthdate.resolved.month = 1 AND
$intent.params.birthdate.resolved.day > 1)
Here are examples for your reference:
A. Using the condition in the Conditional Response
B. Using the condition as the Condition Route:
Please note that the birthdate parameter isn’t a string parameter. It is composed of year, month, and day sub-parameters so it is appropriate to utilize them for your use case. Also, note that dates are in ISO-8601 format. For more information, you can refer to the System Entities documentation.
Here are the following results using the condition defined in the conditional response:
When the user enters the same year but not January 1st
When the user enters an invalid date
When the user enters a previous date from 2000-01-01
When the user enters a valid date and latest from 2000-01-01
I guess $intent.params.dob.resolved returns a string, so you need to build a date object firstly, and then compare it with your date.
I encountered a similar problem a few weeks ago. Thing is, Dialogflow actually defaults to string parameters: this means that every value entered as a parameter will (by default) be a string, surrounded by "quotes".
To operate comparisons between dates you'd want to compare integers/numbers, and I think the best way to do so is to take advantage of date system entities.
For example, the system entity
#sys.date
allows you to match a date inserted by the user. Then the best part is, in your condition, you can even manage the date by referencing sub-parts. Here is an example:
if $intent.params.dob.year <= 2005 AND $intent.params.dob.month <= 04:
I'm sorry, you're too young to use this service!
endif
Also, on a side note, "intent parameters" actually become "session parameters" as soon as Dialogflow makes a step from the state in which the parameter was set to another page.
This means that if you set the parameter dob when the user says "I was born on the thirteen of July, 2004" and then you go on to a new page, that parameter will only be accessible as $session.params.dob (and session parameters don't have a "resolved value", they are resolved by default).
So, to recap. Make sure you're using the system date entity. Make conditions for all the parts of the date you need to verify (year, month, day) and try to use your parameter as a session parameter.
I hope at least some of what I wrote can help you, happy bot-building!
I have an old app that let's users insert dates so everyone knows when they will be on vacation. Up until now, they had text field where they would enter text as they like ("1.1,5.1,21.1-25.1") or whatever they want as it is simple text field.
This kind of input excludes any chance of filtering or search.
I started playing with Yii not too long ago and this is first time i need to work with multiple dates and or date ranges.
What i need is advice on how to store those dates / date ranges into database? I know Yii has it's way to store single date (i have done it before), but i have no idea if it can work with date ranges and or multiple dates.
If any of you out there had similar problem i would apriciate your advice on how to store those dates and maybe extensions you used etc.
Of course i would like to make it user friendly with date pickers and search capabilities, but i'm taking it step by step. Once i have it stored correctly, searching and filtering wont be huge pain.
What i need is advice on how to store those dates / date ranges into database?
Well that depends on how do you want to use the date range. It depends on what is the criteria for searching. Because If you dont need to search the dates regularly then there may be some dirty ways to accomplish this task.
But if you need to search it frequently then you should make explicit columns for starting and end dates in the database table.By making explicit tables you can search in date ranges easily. for example you can run an sql query like
SELECT * FROM yourtable WHERE startDate<="some date" AND endDate>="some date"
NOTE:
You have to be careful about the format of date in your php code and format of date in database.
If you need to use date range just for calculation purposes then you can use simple php code to accomplish that.
$startDate = '2014-02-20';
$endDate = '2014-03-20';
$inputDate = '2014-02-28';
$start = strtotime($startDate);
$end = strtotime($endDate);
$input = strtotime($inputDate);
bool $isBetween=(($user >= $start) && ($user <= $end));
Yii way:
Actually there is not yii way to work with date range through one window. Actually each framework provide basic independent access to all attributes.That does not mean you cant change the behavior. Yes you can, but you need to code more. There are some extensions which you may find helpful in future
Adding a date range search for CGridView the easy way
How to filter CGridView with From Date and To Date datepicker
I have a content type article with a field date.
I am trying to fire a variant from Page Manager by defining a selection rule based on a date field.
What I am trying to do is applying this variant when
the node type is article
field date, start date < now < field date, end date
I can define the first condition but I can't figure out how to make a condition based on a date. Is it possible or not? I couldn't find more information about this.
Thanks
I managed to do this finally by writing a PHP Code Selection Rule.
I got from the exposed $contexts variable the start and end values for date field and I wrote a simple condition to check if "now" is in between the two dates.
Beware that the dates are stored in UTC format in the field and your site/users might be in a different timezone.
Upon logging into their accounts, each user has their login date and time stored to the database. What I was looking to do however is figure out the amount of days (or preferably convert into months if greater than a month) so that if a user views their profile they can see how active the band are. Also, this could benefit me in terms of keeping active profiles top of the agenda for content on the site so that it doesn't become stale from inactive users content filling up main page content.
I'm using ColdFusion so i'd be looking for a way to find for example how many days ago #lastLogin# was from #now()#. So say if the date of the last login was 23/04/2013 and todays date is 29/04/2013 it would read "Last Active, 1 day ago." However if the last login was 23/03/2013, it would read "Last Active, 1 month ago".
Anybody know how to do this? Thanks.
P.S I currently have no code from testing this as I have no idea where to start in terms of achieving this.
Use DateDiff
<cfset days = dateDiff("d", LoginDateVariable, now()) />
It's as simple as that.
P.S I currently have no code from testing this as I have no idea where
to start in terms of achieving this.
This doesn't answer your direct question but to help you know where to get started, I would strongly suggest reviewing the built in ColdFusion functions and tags that are available to you.
Tags
Tags by function
Functions
Functions by category
Also, Google searches usually land you at the docs, just add "coldfusion" to your search string. Searching google for coldfusion date functions yields very helpful answers, the first of which are a list of all ColdFusion date functions.
Dale's answer is spot on. But I would also suggest returning it as a variable with your query. Let the SQL server do the work. It's very efficient for those types of calculations. Not that CF can't do them well, too. But it's probably more appropriate for SQL to do that lifting. Especially if you're already returning the lastLogin date.
It would be similar to the CF solution:
SELECT ...., lastLogin, DATEDIFF(d, lastLogin, GETDATE()) AS LastLoginDays
FROM ....
WHERE ....
That would give you the number of days. You'd have to decide how you wanted to define a month if you wanted to break it out by month/day. That would get a bit more complex. You could write a SQL function that could be run on both dates and give you an accurate count of days/months/years since last login.
One other thing to keep in mind: Where are the dates being generated? When you insert loginDate into the database, are you doing a now() in CF before you insert it or are you doing a getDate() in SQL when you insert it? Again, I would let the database do your date logic, but you'd want to compare the two dates from the same source. For instance, if your loginDate was a database getDate() then you may not want to compare that to a CF now(). One goes by the datetime of the SQL server and the other goes by the datetime of the CF server. They could be different.