What's the values for the Freq_Interval column in MSDB.dbo.SysSchedules when Freq_Type is weekly and more...












3















I'm reading up on the SysSchedules table in the Microsoft API, and am trying to incorporate using this table in a query.



In the documentation, the Freq_Interval column seems to be defined out for when a single day is selected in the schedule and the Freq_Type is weekly.
But what are the values for every other combination of days when more than one day is selected?



For example, I have a job which is scheduled to occur weekly on the days Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday.
I see in the MSDB.dbo.SysSchedules table, it has a Freq_Interval of 62 (which isn't listed in the documentation.)



Job Schedule DetailsMSDB.dbo.SysSchedules










share|improve this question



























    3















    I'm reading up on the SysSchedules table in the Microsoft API, and am trying to incorporate using this table in a query.



    In the documentation, the Freq_Interval column seems to be defined out for when a single day is selected in the schedule and the Freq_Type is weekly.
    But what are the values for every other combination of days when more than one day is selected?



    For example, I have a job which is scheduled to occur weekly on the days Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday.
    I see in the MSDB.dbo.SysSchedules table, it has a Freq_Interval of 62 (which isn't listed in the documentation.)



    Job Schedule DetailsMSDB.dbo.SysSchedules










    share|improve this question

























      3












      3








      3








      I'm reading up on the SysSchedules table in the Microsoft API, and am trying to incorporate using this table in a query.



      In the documentation, the Freq_Interval column seems to be defined out for when a single day is selected in the schedule and the Freq_Type is weekly.
      But what are the values for every other combination of days when more than one day is selected?



      For example, I have a job which is scheduled to occur weekly on the days Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday.
      I see in the MSDB.dbo.SysSchedules table, it has a Freq_Interval of 62 (which isn't listed in the documentation.)



      Job Schedule DetailsMSDB.dbo.SysSchedules










      share|improve this question














      I'm reading up on the SysSchedules table in the Microsoft API, and am trying to incorporate using this table in a query.



      In the documentation, the Freq_Interval column seems to be defined out for when a single day is selected in the schedule and the Freq_Type is weekly.
      But what are the values for every other combination of days when more than one day is selected?



      For example, I have a job which is scheduled to occur weekly on the days Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday.
      I see in the MSDB.dbo.SysSchedules table, it has a Freq_Interval of 62 (which isn't listed in the documentation.)



      Job Schedule DetailsMSDB.dbo.SysSchedules







      sql-server sql-server-2008-r2 jobs system-tables






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 5 hours ago









      J.D.J.D.

      457311




      457311






















          1 Answer
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          4














          The documentation states




          freq_interval is one or more of the following:



          1 = Sunday

          2 = Monday

          4 = Tuesday

          8 = Wednesday

          16 = Thursday

          32 = Friday

          64 = Saturday




          These values are all powers of 2.



          When you select multiple days simply add the distinct codes.



          2 + 4 + 8 + 16 + 32 = 62


          or alternatively use the bitwise or operator to combine them.



          2 | 4 | 8 | 16 | 32


          (my recommendation would be to use | in code and + if adding them up in your head! - | is the "correct" thing to use and won't behave incorrectly if you have duplicate values in the list)



          If you are trying to do the reverse operation you need bitwise and



          DECLARE @Sunday TINYINT = 1,
          @Monday TINYINT = 2,
          @Tuesday TINYINT = 4,
          @Wednesday TINYINT = 8,
          @Thursday TINYINT = 16,
          @Friday TINYINT = 32,
          @Saturday TINYINT = 64;

          DECLARE @TestValue TINYINT = 62;

          SELECT CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Sunday = @Sunday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Sunday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Monday = @Monday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Monday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Tuesday = @Tuesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Tuesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Wednesday = @Wednesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Wednesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Thursday = @Thursday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Thursday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Friday = @Friday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Friday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Saturday = @Saturday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Saturday





          share|improve this answer


























          • Great answer, thank you! When I first saw how they spaced out that enum I was wondering if it was something like a bitwise operation. But I'm not super experienced using that type of operation and didn't think much more into it. Cool that'll work though, thanks.

            – J.D.
            9 mins ago











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          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          The documentation states




          freq_interval is one or more of the following:



          1 = Sunday

          2 = Monday

          4 = Tuesday

          8 = Wednesday

          16 = Thursday

          32 = Friday

          64 = Saturday




          These values are all powers of 2.



          When you select multiple days simply add the distinct codes.



          2 + 4 + 8 + 16 + 32 = 62


          or alternatively use the bitwise or operator to combine them.



          2 | 4 | 8 | 16 | 32


          (my recommendation would be to use | in code and + if adding them up in your head! - | is the "correct" thing to use and won't behave incorrectly if you have duplicate values in the list)



          If you are trying to do the reverse operation you need bitwise and



          DECLARE @Sunday TINYINT = 1,
          @Monday TINYINT = 2,
          @Tuesday TINYINT = 4,
          @Wednesday TINYINT = 8,
          @Thursday TINYINT = 16,
          @Friday TINYINT = 32,
          @Saturday TINYINT = 64;

          DECLARE @TestValue TINYINT = 62;

          SELECT CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Sunday = @Sunday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Sunday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Monday = @Monday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Monday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Tuesday = @Tuesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Tuesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Wednesday = @Wednesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Wednesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Thursday = @Thursday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Thursday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Friday = @Friday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Friday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Saturday = @Saturday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Saturday





          share|improve this answer


























          • Great answer, thank you! When I first saw how they spaced out that enum I was wondering if it was something like a bitwise operation. But I'm not super experienced using that type of operation and didn't think much more into it. Cool that'll work though, thanks.

            – J.D.
            9 mins ago
















          4














          The documentation states




          freq_interval is one or more of the following:



          1 = Sunday

          2 = Monday

          4 = Tuesday

          8 = Wednesday

          16 = Thursday

          32 = Friday

          64 = Saturday




          These values are all powers of 2.



          When you select multiple days simply add the distinct codes.



          2 + 4 + 8 + 16 + 32 = 62


          or alternatively use the bitwise or operator to combine them.



          2 | 4 | 8 | 16 | 32


          (my recommendation would be to use | in code and + if adding them up in your head! - | is the "correct" thing to use and won't behave incorrectly if you have duplicate values in the list)



          If you are trying to do the reverse operation you need bitwise and



          DECLARE @Sunday TINYINT = 1,
          @Monday TINYINT = 2,
          @Tuesday TINYINT = 4,
          @Wednesday TINYINT = 8,
          @Thursday TINYINT = 16,
          @Friday TINYINT = 32,
          @Saturday TINYINT = 64;

          DECLARE @TestValue TINYINT = 62;

          SELECT CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Sunday = @Sunday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Sunday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Monday = @Monday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Monday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Tuesday = @Tuesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Tuesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Wednesday = @Wednesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Wednesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Thursday = @Thursday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Thursday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Friday = @Friday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Friday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Saturday = @Saturday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Saturday





          share|improve this answer


























          • Great answer, thank you! When I first saw how they spaced out that enum I was wondering if it was something like a bitwise operation. But I'm not super experienced using that type of operation and didn't think much more into it. Cool that'll work though, thanks.

            – J.D.
            9 mins ago














          4












          4








          4







          The documentation states




          freq_interval is one or more of the following:



          1 = Sunday

          2 = Monday

          4 = Tuesday

          8 = Wednesday

          16 = Thursday

          32 = Friday

          64 = Saturday




          These values are all powers of 2.



          When you select multiple days simply add the distinct codes.



          2 + 4 + 8 + 16 + 32 = 62


          or alternatively use the bitwise or operator to combine them.



          2 | 4 | 8 | 16 | 32


          (my recommendation would be to use | in code and + if adding them up in your head! - | is the "correct" thing to use and won't behave incorrectly if you have duplicate values in the list)



          If you are trying to do the reverse operation you need bitwise and



          DECLARE @Sunday TINYINT = 1,
          @Monday TINYINT = 2,
          @Tuesday TINYINT = 4,
          @Wednesday TINYINT = 8,
          @Thursday TINYINT = 16,
          @Friday TINYINT = 32,
          @Saturday TINYINT = 64;

          DECLARE @TestValue TINYINT = 62;

          SELECT CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Sunday = @Sunday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Sunday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Monday = @Monday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Monday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Tuesday = @Tuesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Tuesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Wednesday = @Wednesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Wednesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Thursday = @Thursday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Thursday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Friday = @Friday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Friday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Saturday = @Saturday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Saturday





          share|improve this answer















          The documentation states




          freq_interval is one or more of the following:



          1 = Sunday

          2 = Monday

          4 = Tuesday

          8 = Wednesday

          16 = Thursday

          32 = Friday

          64 = Saturday




          These values are all powers of 2.



          When you select multiple days simply add the distinct codes.



          2 + 4 + 8 + 16 + 32 = 62


          or alternatively use the bitwise or operator to combine them.



          2 | 4 | 8 | 16 | 32


          (my recommendation would be to use | in code and + if adding them up in your head! - | is the "correct" thing to use and won't behave incorrectly if you have duplicate values in the list)



          If you are trying to do the reverse operation you need bitwise and



          DECLARE @Sunday TINYINT = 1,
          @Monday TINYINT = 2,
          @Tuesday TINYINT = 4,
          @Wednesday TINYINT = 8,
          @Thursday TINYINT = 16,
          @Friday TINYINT = 32,
          @Saturday TINYINT = 64;

          DECLARE @TestValue TINYINT = 62;

          SELECT CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Sunday = @Sunday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Sunday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Monday = @Monday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Monday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Tuesday = @Tuesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Tuesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Wednesday = @Wednesday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Wednesday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Thursday = @Thursday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Thursday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Friday = @Friday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Friday,
          CASE WHEN @TestValue & @Saturday = @Saturday THEN 'Y' ELSE 'N' END AS Saturday






          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



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          edited 4 hours ago

























          answered 4 hours ago









          Martin SmithMartin Smith

          63.6k10171254




          63.6k10171254













          • Great answer, thank you! When I first saw how they spaced out that enum I was wondering if it was something like a bitwise operation. But I'm not super experienced using that type of operation and didn't think much more into it. Cool that'll work though, thanks.

            – J.D.
            9 mins ago



















          • Great answer, thank you! When I first saw how they spaced out that enum I was wondering if it was something like a bitwise operation. But I'm not super experienced using that type of operation and didn't think much more into it. Cool that'll work though, thanks.

            – J.D.
            9 mins ago

















          Great answer, thank you! When I first saw how they spaced out that enum I was wondering if it was something like a bitwise operation. But I'm not super experienced using that type of operation and didn't think much more into it. Cool that'll work though, thanks.

          – J.D.
          9 mins ago





          Great answer, thank you! When I first saw how they spaced out that enum I was wondering if it was something like a bitwise operation. But I'm not super experienced using that type of operation and didn't think much more into it. Cool that'll work though, thanks.

          – J.D.
          9 mins ago


















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