This section describes the functions that can be used to manipulate temporal values. See Section 11.3, “Date and Time Types”, for a description of the range of values each date and time type has and the valid formats in which values may be specified.
Here is an example that uses date functions. The following query
selects all rows with a date_col value
from within the last 30 days:
mysql>SELECT->somethingFROMtbl_nameWHERE DATE_SUB(CURDATE(),INTERVAL 30 DAY) <=date_col;
Note that the query also selects rows with dates that lie in the future.
Functions that expect date values usually accept datetime values and ignore the time part. Functions that expect time values usually accept datetime values and ignore the date part.
Functions that return the current date or time each are evaluated
only once per query at the start of query execution. This means
that multiple references to a function such as
NOW() within a single query always produce the
same result (for our purposes a single query also includes a call
to a stored routine or trigger and all sub-routines called by that
routine/trigger). This principle also applies to
CURDATE(), CURTIME(),
UTC_DATE(), UTC_TIME(),
UTC_TIMESTAMP(), and to any of their synonyms.
The CURRENT_TIMESTAMP(),
CURRENT_TIME(),
CURRENT_DATE(), and
FROM_UNIXTIME() functions return values in the
connection's current time zone, which is available as the value of
the time_zone system variable. In addition,
UNIX_TIMESTAMP() assumes that its argument is a
datetime value in the current time zone. See
Section 5.11.8, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
Some date functions can be used with “zero” dates or
incomplete dates such as '2001-11-00', whereas
others cannot. Functions that extract parts of dates typically
work with incomplete dates. For example:
mysql> SELECT DAYOFMONTH('2001-11-00'), MONTH('2005-00-00');
-> 0, 0
Other functions expect complete dates and return
NULL for incomplete dates. These include
functions that perform date arithmetic or that map parts of dates
to names. For example:
mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2006-05-00',INTERVAL 1 DAY);-> NULL mysql>SELECT DAYNAME('2006-05-00');-> NULL
ADDDATE(,
date,INTERVAL
expr
unit)ADDDATE(
expr,days)
When invoked with the INTERVAL form of the
second argument, ADDDATE() is a synonym for
DATE_ADD(). The related function
SUBDATE() is a synonym for
DATE_SUB(). For information on the
INTERVAL unit
argument, see the discussion for
DATE_ADD().
mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1998-01-02', INTERVAL 31 DAY);-> '1998-02-02' mysql>SELECT ADDDATE('1998-01-02', INTERVAL 31 DAY);-> '1998-02-02'
When invoked with the days form of
the second argument, MySQL treats it as an integer number of
days to be added to expr.
mysql> SELECT ADDDATE('1998-01-02', 31);
-> '1998-02-02'
ADDTIME() adds
expr2 to
expr1 and returns the result.
expr1 is a time or datetime
expression, and expr2 is a time
expression.
mysql>SELECT ADDTIME('1997-12-31 23:59:59.999999',->'1 1:1:1.000002');-> '1998-01-02 01:01:01.000001' mysql>SELECT ADDTIME('01:00:00.999999', '02:00:00.999998');-> '03:00:01.999997'
CONVERT_TZ() converts a datetime value
dt from the time zone given by
from_tz to the time zone given by
to_tz and returns the resulting
value. Time zones are specified as described in
Section 5.11.8, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”. This function returns
NULL if the arguments are invalid.
If the value falls out of the supported range of the
TIMESTAMP type when converted fom
from_tz to UTC, no conversion
occurs. The TIMESTAMP range is described in
Section 11.1.2, “Overview of Date and Time Types”.
mysql>SELECT CONVERT_TZ('2004-01-01 12:00:00','GMT','MET');-> '2004-01-01 13:00:00' mysql>SELECT CONVERT_TZ('2004-01-01 12:00:00','+00:00','+10:00');-> '2004-01-01 22:00:00'
Note: To use named time zones
such as 'MET' or
'Europe/Moscow', the time zone tables must
be properly set up. See Section 5.11.8, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”,
for instructions.
If you intend to use CONVERT_TZ() while
other tables are locked with LOCK TABLES,
you must also lock the mysql.time_zone_name
table.
Returns the current date as a value in
'YYYY-MM-DD' or YYYYMMDD
format, depending on whether the function is used in a string
or numeric context.
mysql>SELECT CURDATE();-> '1997-12-15' mysql>SELECT CURDATE() + 0;-> 19971215
CURRENT_DATE and
CURRENT_DATE() are synonyms for
CURDATE().
Returns the current time as a value in
'HH:MM:SS' or HHMMSS
format, depending on whether the function is used in a string
or numeric context.
mysql>SELECT CURTIME();-> '23:50:26' mysql>SELECT CURTIME() + 0;-> 235026
CURRENT_TIME and
CURRENT_TIME() are synonyms for
CURTIME().
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP()
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP and
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP() are synonyms for
NOW().
Extracts the date part of the date or datetime expression
expr.
mysql> SELECT DATE('2003-12-31 01:02:03');
-> '2003-12-31'
DATEDIFF() returns
expr1 –
expr2 expressed as a value in days
from one date to the other. expr1
and expr2 are date or date-and-time
expressions. Only the date parts of the values are used in the
calculation.
mysql>SELECT DATEDIFF('1997-12-31 23:59:59','1997-12-30');-> 1 mysql>SELECT DATEDIFF('1997-11-30 23:59:59','1997-12-31');-> -31
DATE_ADD(,
date,INTERVAL
expr
unit)DATE_SUB(
date,INTERVAL
expr
unit)
These functions perform date arithmetic.
date is a
DATETIME or DATE value
specifying the starting date. expr
is an expression specifying the interval value to be added or
subtracted from the starting date.
expr is a string; it may start with
a ‘-’ for negative intervals.
unit is a keyword indicating the
units in which the expression should be interpreted.
The INTERVAL keyword and the
unit specifier are not case
sensitive.
The following table shows the expected form of the
expr argument for each
unit value.
unit Value | Expected
expr
Format |
MICROSECOND | MICROSECONDS |
SECOND | SECONDS |
MINUTE | MINUTES |
HOUR | HOURS |
DAY | DAYS |
WEEK | WEEKS |
MONTH | MONTHS |
QUARTER | QUARTERS |
YEAR | YEARS |
SECOND_MICROSECOND | 'SECONDS.MICROSECONDS' |
MINUTE_MICROSECOND | 'MINUTES.MICROSECONDS' |
MINUTE_SECOND | 'MINUTES:SECONDS' |
HOUR_MICROSECOND | 'HOURS.MICROSECONDS' |
HOUR_SECOND | 'HOURS:MINUTES:SECONDS' |
HOUR_MINUTE | 'HOURS:MINUTES' |
DAY_MICROSECOND | 'DAYS.MICROSECONDS' |
DAY_SECOND | 'DAYS HOURS:MINUTES:SECONDS' |
DAY_MINUTE | 'DAYS HOURS:MINUTES' |
DAY_HOUR | 'DAYS HOURS' |
YEAR_MONTH | 'YEARS-MONTHS' |
The values QUARTER and
WEEK are available beginning with MySQL
5.0.0.
MySQL allows any punctuation delimiter in the
expr format. Those shown in the
table are the suggested delimiters. If the
date argument is a
DATE value and your calculations involve
only YEAR, MONTH, and
DAY parts (that is, no time parts), the
result is a DATE value. Otherwise, the
result is a DATETIME value.
Date arithmetic also can be performed using
INTERVAL together with the
+ or - operator:
date+ INTERVALexprunitdate- INTERVALexprunit
INTERVAL is allowed on either
side of the expr
unit+ operator if the expression on
the other side is a date or datetime value. For the
- operator, INTERVAL
is allowed only on
the right side, because it makes no sense to subtract a date
or datetime value from an interval.
expr
unit
mysql>SELECT '1997-12-31 23:59:59' + INTERVAL 1 SECOND;-> '1998-01-01 00:00:00' mysql>SELECT INTERVAL 1 DAY + '1997-12-31';-> '1998-01-01' mysql>SELECT '1998-01-01' - INTERVAL 1 SECOND;-> '1997-12-31 23:59:59' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1997-12-31 23:59:59',->INTERVAL 1 SECOND);-> '1998-01-01 00:00:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1997-12-31 23:59:59',->INTERVAL 1 DAY);-> '1998-01-01 23:59:59' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1997-12-31 23:59:59',->INTERVAL '1:1' MINUTE_SECOND);-> '1998-01-01 00:01:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_SUB('1998-01-01 00:00:00',->INTERVAL '1 1:1:1' DAY_SECOND);-> '1997-12-30 22:58:59' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1998-01-01 00:00:00',->INTERVAL '-1 10' DAY_HOUR);-> '1997-12-30 14:00:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_SUB('1998-01-02', INTERVAL 31 DAY);-> '1997-12-02' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1992-12-31 23:59:59.000002',->INTERVAL '1.999999' SECOND_MICROSECOND);-> '1993-01-01 00:00:01.000001'
If you specify an interval value that is too short (does not
include all the interval parts that would be expected from the
unit keyword), MySQL assumes that
you have left out the leftmost parts of the interval value.
For example, if you specify a unit
of DAY_SECOND, the value of
expr is expected to have days,
hours, minutes, and seconds parts. If you specify a value like
'1:10', MySQL assumes that the days and
hours parts are missing and the value represents minutes and
seconds. In other words, '1:10' DAY_SECOND
is interpreted in such a way that it is equivalent to
'1:10' MINUTE_SECOND. This is analogous to
the way that MySQL interprets TIME values
as representing elapsed time rather than as a time of day.
If you add to or subtract from a date value something that contains a time part, the result is automatically converted to a datetime value:
mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1999-01-01', INTERVAL 1 DAY);-> '1999-01-02' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1999-01-01', INTERVAL 1 HOUR);-> '1999-01-01 01:00:00'
If you add MONTH,
YEAR_MONTH, or YEAR and
the resulting date has a day that is larger than the maximum
day for the new month, the day is adjusted to the maximum days
in the new month:
mysql> SELECT DATE_ADD('1998-01-30', INTERVAL 1 MONTH);
-> '1998-02-28'
Date arithmetic operations require complete dates and do not
work with incomplete dates such as
'2006-07-00' or badly malformed dates:
mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2006-07-00', INTERVAL 1 DAY);-> NULL mysql>SELECT '2005-03-32' + INTERVAL 1 MONTH;-> NULL
Formats the date value according to
the format string.
The following specifiers may be used in the
format string. The
‘%’ character is required
before format specifier characters.
| Specifier | Description |
%a | Abbreviated weekday name
(Sun..Sat) |
%b | Abbreviated month name (Jan..Dec) |
%c | Month, numeric (0..12) |
%D | Day of the month with English suffix (0th,
1st, 2nd,
3rd, …) |
%d | Day of the month, numeric (00..31) |
%e | Day of the month, numeric (0..31) |
%f | Microseconds (000000..999999) |
%H | Hour (00..23) |
%h | Hour (01..12) |
%I | Hour (01..12) |
%i | Minutes, numeric (00..59) |
%j | Day of year (001..366) |
%k | Hour (0..23) |
%l | Hour (1..12) |
%M | Month name (January..December) |
%m | Month, numeric (00..12) |
%p | AM or PM |
%r | Time, 12-hour (hh:mm:ss followed by
AM or PM) |
%S | Seconds (00..59) |
%s | Seconds (00..59) |
%T | Time, 24-hour (hh:mm:ss) |
%U | Week (00..53), where Sunday is the
first day of the week |
%u | Week (00..53), where Monday is the
first day of the week |
%V | Week (01..53), where Sunday is the
first day of the week; used with %X |
%v | Week (01..53), where Monday is the
first day of the week; used with %x |
%W | Weekday name (Sunday..Saturday) |
%w | Day of the week
(0=Sunday..6=Saturday) |
%X | Year for the week where Sunday is the first day of the week, numeric,
four digits; used with %V |
%x | Year for the week, where Monday is the first day of the week, numeric,
four digits; used with %v |
%Y | Year, numeric, four digits |
%y | Year, numeric (two digits) |
%% | A literal ‘%’ character |
% | x, for any
‘x’ not listed
above |
Ranges for the month and day specifiers begin with zero due to
the fact that MySQL allows the storing of incomplete dates
such as '2004-00-00'.
mysql>SELECT DATE_FORMAT('1997-10-04 22:23:00', '%W %M %Y');-> 'Saturday October 1997' mysql>SELECT DATE_FORMAT('1997-10-04 22:23:00', '%H:%i:%s');-> '22:23:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_FORMAT('1997-10-04 22:23:00','%D %y %a %d %m %b %j'); -> '4th 97 Sat 04 10 Oct 277' mysql>SELECT DATE_FORMAT('1997-10-04 22:23:00','%H %k %I %r %T %S %w'); -> '22 22 10 10:23:00 PM 22:23:00 00 6' mysql>SELECT DATE_FORMAT('1999-01-01', '%X %V');-> '1998 52' mysql>SELECT DATE_FORMAT('2006-06-00', '%d');-> '00'
DAY() is a synonym for
DAYOFMONTH().
Returns the name of the weekday for
date.
mysql> SELECT DAYNAME('1998-02-05');
-> 'Thursday'
Returns the day of the month for
date, in the range
0 to 31.
mysql> SELECT DAYOFMONTH('1998-02-03');
-> 3
Returns the weekday index for date
(1 = Sunday, 2 = Monday,
…, 7 = Saturday). These index values
correspond to the ODBC standard.
mysql> SELECT DAYOFWEEK('1998-02-03');
-> 3
Returns the day of the year for
date, in the range
1 to 366.
mysql> SELECT DAYOFYEAR('1998-02-03');
-> 34
The EXTRACT() function uses the same kinds
of unit specifiers as DATE_ADD() or
DATE_SUB(), but extracts parts from the
date rather than performing date arithmetic.
mysql>SELECT EXTRACT(YEAR FROM '1999-07-02');-> 1999 mysql>SELECT EXTRACT(YEAR_MONTH FROM '1999-07-02 01:02:03');-> 199907 mysql>SELECT EXTRACT(DAY_MINUTE FROM '1999-07-02 01:02:03');-> 20102 mysql>SELECT EXTRACT(MICROSECOND->FROM '2003-01-02 10:30:00.00123');-> 123
Given a day number N, returns a
DATE value.
mysql> SELECT FROM_DAYS(729669);
-> '1997-10-07'
Use FROM_DAYS() with caution on old dates.
It is not intended for use with values that precede the advent
of the Gregorian calendar (1582). See
Section 12.6, “What Calendar Is Used By MySQL?”.
FROM_UNIXTIME(,
unix_timestamp)FROM_UNIXTIME(
unix_timestamp,format)
Returns a representation of the
unix_timestamp argument as a value
in 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' or
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS format, depending on whether
the function is used in a string or numeric context.
unix_timestamp is an internal
timestamp value such as is produced by the
UNIX_TIMESTAMP() function.
If format is given, the result is
formatted according to the format
string, which is used the same way as listed in the entry for
the DATE_FORMAT() function.
mysql>SELECT FROM_UNIXTIME(875996580);-> '1997-10-04 22:23:00' mysql>SELECT FROM_UNIXTIME(875996580) + 0;-> 19971004222300 mysql>SELECT FROM_UNIXTIME(UNIX_TIMESTAMP(),->'%Y %D %M %h:%i:%s %x');-> '2003 6th August 06:22:58 2003'
Note: If you use UNIX_TIMESTAMP() and
FROM_UNIXTIME() to convert between
TIMESTAMP values and Unix timestamp values,
the conversion is lossy because the mapping is not one-to-one
in both directions. For details, see the description of the
UNIX_TIMESTAMP() function.
GET_FORMAT(DATE|TIME|DATETIME,
'EUR'|'USA'|'JIS'|'ISO'|'INTERNAL')
Returns a format string. This function is useful in
combination with the DATE_FORMAT() and the
STR_TO_DATE() functions.
The possible values for the first and second arguments result
in several possible format strings (for the specifiers used,
see the table in the DATE_FORMAT() function
description). ISO format refers to ISO 9075, not ISO 8601.
| Function Call | Result |
GET_FORMAT(DATE,'USA') | '%m.%d.%Y' |
GET_FORMAT(DATE,'JIS') | '%Y-%m-%d' |
GET_FORMAT(DATE,'ISO') | '%Y-%m-%d' |
GET_FORMAT(DATE,'EUR') | '%d.%m.%Y' |
GET_FORMAT(DATE,'INTERNAL') | '%Y%m%d' |
GET_FORMAT(DATETIME,'USA') | '%Y-%m-%d-%H.%i.%s' |
GET_FORMAT(DATETIME,'JIS') | '%Y-%m-%d %H:%i:%s' |
GET_FORMAT(DATETIME,'ISO') | '%Y-%m-%d %H:%i:%s' |
GET_FORMAT(DATETIME,'EUR') | '%Y-%m-%d-%H.%i.%s' |
GET_FORMAT(DATETIME,'INTERNAL') | '%Y%m%d%H%i%s' |
GET_FORMAT(TIME,'USA') | '%h:%i:%s %p' |
GET_FORMAT(TIME,'JIS') | '%H:%i:%s' |
GET_FORMAT(TIME,'ISO') | '%H:%i:%s' |
GET_FORMAT(TIME,'EUR') | '%H.%i.%S' |
GET_FORMAT(TIME,'INTERNAL') | '%H%i%s' |
TIMESTAMP can also be used as the first
argument to GET_FORMAT(), in which case the
function returns the same values as for
DATETIME.
mysql>SELECT DATE_FORMAT('2003-10-03',GET_FORMAT(DATE,'EUR'));-> '03.10.2003' mysql>SELECT STR_TO_DATE('10.31.2003',GET_FORMAT(DATE,'USA'));-> '2003-10-31'
Returns the hour for time. The
range of the return value is 0 to
23 for time-of-day values. However, the
range of TIME values actually is much
larger, so HOUR can return values greater
than 23.
mysql>SELECT HOUR('10:05:03');-> 10 mysql>SELECT HOUR('272:59:59');-> 272
Takes a date or datetime value and returns the corresponding
value for the last day of the month. Returns
NULL if the argument is invalid.
mysql>SELECT LAST_DAY('2003-02-05');-> '2003-02-28' mysql>SELECT LAST_DAY('2004-02-05');-> '2004-02-29' mysql>SELECT LAST_DAY('2004-01-01 01:01:01');-> '2004-01-31' mysql>SELECT LAST_DAY('2003-03-32');-> NULL
LOCALTIME and
LOCALTIME() are synonyms for
NOW().
LOCALTIMESTAMP,
LOCALTIMESTAMP()
LOCALTIMESTAMP and
LOCALTIMESTAMP() are synonyms for
NOW().
Returns a date, given year and day-of-year values.
dayofyear must be greater than 0 or
the result is NULL.
mysql>SELECT MAKEDATE(2001,31), MAKEDATE(2001,32);-> '2001-01-31', '2001-02-01' mysql>SELECT MAKEDATE(2001,365), MAKEDATE(2004,365);-> '2001-12-31', '2004-12-30' mysql>SELECT MAKEDATE(2001,0);-> NULL
Returns a time value calculated from the
hour,
minute, and
second arguments.
mysql> SELECT MAKETIME(12,15,30);
-> '12:15:30'
Returns the microseconds from the time or datetime expression
expr as a number in the range from
0 to 999999.
mysql>SELECT MICROSECOND('12:00:00.123456');-> 123456 mysql>SELECT MICROSECOND('1997-12-31 23:59:59.000010');-> 10
Returns the minute for time, in the
range 0 to 59.
mysql> SELECT MINUTE('98-02-03 10:05:03');
-> 5
Returns the month for date, in the
range 0 to 12.
mysql> SELECT MONTH('1998-02-03');
-> 2
Returns the full name of the month for
date.
mysql> SELECT MONTHNAME('1998-02-05');
-> 'February'
Returns the current date and time as a value in
'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' or
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS format, depending on whether
the function is used in a string or numeric context.
mysql>SELECT NOW();-> '1997-12-15 23:50:26' mysql>SELECT NOW() + 0;-> 19971215235026
NOW() returns a constant time that
indicates the time at which the statement began to execute.
(Within a stored routine or trigger, NOW()
returns the time at which the routine or triggering statement
began to execute.) This differs from the behavior for
SYSDATE(), which returns the exact time at
which it executes as of MySQL 5.0.13.
mysql>SELECT NOW(), SLEEP(2), NOW();+---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | NOW() | SLEEP(2) | NOW() | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | 2006-04-12 13:47:36 | 0 | 2006-04-12 13:47:36 | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+ mysql>SELECT SYSDATE(), SLEEP(2), SYSDATE();+---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | SYSDATE() | SLEEP(2) | SYSDATE() | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | 2006-04-12 13:47:44 | 0 | 2006-04-12 13:47:46 | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+
See the description for SYSDATE() for
additional information about the differences between the two
functions.
Adds N months to period
P (in the format
YYMM or YYYYMM). Returns
a value in the format YYYYMM. Note that the
period argument P is
not a date value.
mysql> SELECT PERIOD_ADD(9801,2);
-> 199803
Returns the number of months between periods
P1 and
P2. P1
and P2 should be in the format
YYMM or YYYYMM. Note
that the period arguments P1 and
P2 are not
date values.
mysql> SELECT PERIOD_DIFF(9802,199703);
-> 11
Returns the quarter of the year for
date, in the range
1 to 4.
mysql> SELECT QUARTER('98-04-01');
-> 2
Returns the second for time, in the
range 0 to 59.
mysql> SELECT SECOND('10:05:03');
-> 3
Returns the seconds argument,
converted to hours, minutes, and seconds, as a value in
'HH:MM:SS' or HHMMSS
format, depending on whether the function is used in a string
or numeric context.
mysql>SELECT SEC_TO_TIME(2378);-> '00:39:38' mysql>SELECT SEC_TO_TIME(2378) + 0;-> 3938
This is the inverse of the DATE_FORMAT()
function. It takes a string str and
a format string format.
STR_TO_DATE() returns a
DATETIME value if the format string
contains both date and time parts, or a
DATE or TIME value if
the string contains only date or time parts.
The date, time, or datetime values contained in
str should be given in the format
indicated by format. For the
specifiers that can be used in
format, see the
DATE_FORMAT() function description. If
str contains an illegal date, time,
or datetime value, STR_TO_DATE() returns
NULL. Starting from MySQL 5.0.3, an illegal
value also produces a warning.
Range checking on the parts of date values is as described in
Section 11.3.1, “The DATETIME, DATE, and TIMESTAMP Types”. This means, for example, that
“zero” dates or dates with part values of 0 are
allowed unless the SQL mode is set to disallow such values.
mysql>SELECT STR_TO_DATE('00/00/0000', '%m/%d/%Y');-> '0000-00-00' mysql>SELECT STR_TO_DATE('04/31/2004', '%m/%d/%Y');-> '2004-04-31'
SUBDATE(,
date,INTERVAL
expr
unit)SUBDATE(
expr,days)
When invoked with the INTERVAL form of the
second argument, SUBDATE() is a synonym for
DATE_SUB(). For information on the
INTERVAL unit
argument, see the discussion for
DATE_ADD().
mysql>SELECT DATE_SUB('1998-01-02', INTERVAL 31 DAY);-> '1997-12-02' mysql>SELECT SUBDATE('1998-01-02', INTERVAL 31 DAY);-> '1997-12-02'
The second form allows the use of an integer value for
days. In such cases, it is
interpreted as the number of days to be subtracted from the
date or datetime expression expr.
mysql> SELECT SUBDATE('1998-01-02 12:00:00', 31);
-> '1997-12-02 12:00:00'
Note: You cannot use format
"%X%V" to convert a year-week string to a
date because the combination of a year and week does not
uniquely identify a year and month if the week crosses a month
boundary. To convert a year-week to a date, then you should
also specify the weekday:
mysql> SELECT STR_TO_DATE('200442 Monday', '%X%V %W');
-> '2004-10-18'
SUBTIME() returns
expr1 –
expr2 expressed as a value in the
same format as expr1.
expr1 is a time or datetime
expression, and expr2 is a time
expression.
mysql>SELECT SUBTIME('1997-12-31 23:59:59.999999','1 1:1:1.000002');-> '1997-12-30 22:58:58.999997' mysql>SELECT SUBTIME('01:00:00.999999', '02:00:00.999998');-> '-00:59:59.999999'
Returns the current date and time as a value in
'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' or
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS format, depending on whether
the function is used in a string or numeric context.
As of MySQL 5.0.13, SYSDATE() returns the
time at which it executes. This differs from the behavior for
NOW(), which returns a constant time that
indicates the time at which the statement began to execute.
(Within a stored routine or trigger, NOW()
returns the time at which the routine or triggering statement
began to execute.)
mysql>SELECT NOW(), SLEEP(2), NOW();+---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | NOW() | SLEEP(2) | NOW() | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | 2006-04-12 13:47:36 | 0 | 2006-04-12 13:47:36 | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+ mysql>SELECT SYSDATE(), SLEEP(2), SYSDATE();+---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | SYSDATE() | SLEEP(2) | SYSDATE() | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+ | 2006-04-12 13:47:44 | 0 | 2006-04-12 13:47:46 | +---------------------+----------+---------------------+
In addition, the SET TIMESTAMP statement
affects the value returned by NOW() but not
by SYSDATE(). This means that timestamp
settings in the binary log have no effect on invocations of
SYSDATE().
Because SYSDATE() can return different
values even within the same statement, and is not affected by
SET TIMESTAMP, it is non-deterministic and
therefore unsafe for replication. If that is a problem, you
can start the server with the
--sysdate-is-now option to cause
SYSDATE() to be an alias for
NOW().
Extracts the time part of the time or datetime expression
expr and returns it as a string.
mysql>SELECT TIME('2003-12-31 01:02:03');-> '01:02:03' mysql>SELECT TIME('2003-12-31 01:02:03.000123');-> '01:02:03.000123'
TIMEDIFF() returns
expr1 –
expr2 expressed as a time value.
expr1 and
expr2 are time or date-and-time
expressions, but both must be of the same type.
mysql>SELECT TIMEDIFF('2000:01:01 00:00:00',->'2000:01:01 00:00:00.000001');-> '-00:00:00.000001' mysql>SELECT TIMEDIFF('1997-12-31 23:59:59.000001',->'1997-12-30 01:01:01.000002');-> '46:58:57.999999'
TIMESTAMP(,
expr)TIMESTAMP(
expr1,expr2)
With a single argument, this function returns the date or
datetime expression expr as a
datetime value. With two arguments, it adds the time
expression expr2 to the date or
datetime expression expr1 and
returns the result as a datetime value.
mysql>SELECT TIMESTAMP('2003-12-31');-> '2003-12-31 00:00:00' mysql>SELECT TIMESTAMP('2003-12-31 12:00:00','12:00:00');-> '2004-01-01 00:00:00'
TIMESTAMPADD(
unit,interval,datetime_expr)
Adds the integer expression
interval to the date or datetime
expression datetime_expr. The unit
for interval is given by the
unit argument, which should be one
of the following values: FRAC_SECOND,
SECOND, MINUTE,
HOUR, DAY,
WEEK, MONTH,
QUARTER, or YEAR.
The unit value may be specified
using one of keywords as shown, or with a prefix of
SQL_TSI_. For example,
DAY and SQL_TSI_DAY both
are legal.
mysql>SELECT TIMESTAMPADD(MINUTE,1,'2003-01-02');-> '2003-01-02 00:01:00' mysql>SELECT TIMESTAMPADD(WEEK,1,'2003-01-02');-> '2003-01-09'
TIMESTAMPADD() is available as of MySQL
5.0.0.
TIMESTAMPDIFF(
unit,datetime_expr1,datetime_expr2)
Returns the integer difference between the date or datetime
expressions datetime_expr1 and
datetime_expr2. The unit for the
result is given by the unit
argument. The legal values for unit
are the same as those listed in the description of the
TIMESTAMPADD() function.
mysql>SELECT TIMESTAMPDIFF(MONTH,'2003-02-01','2003-05-01');-> 3 mysql>SELECT TIMESTAMPDIFF(YEAR,'2002-05-01','2001-01-01');-> -1
TIMESTAMPDIFF() is available as of MySQL
5.0.0.
This is used like the DATE_FORMAT()
function, but the format string may
contain format specifiers only for hours, minutes, and
seconds. Other specifiers produce a NULL
value or 0.
If the time value contains an hour
part that is greater than 23, the
%H and %k hour format
specifiers produce a value larger than the usual range of
0..23. The other hour format specifiers
produce the hour value modulo 12.
mysql> SELECT TIME_FORMAT('100:00:00', '%H %k %h %I %l');
-> '100 100 04 04 4'
Returns the time argument,
converted to seconds.
mysql>SELECT TIME_TO_SEC('22:23:00');-> 80580 mysql>SELECT TIME_TO_SEC('00:39:38');-> 2378
Given a date date, returns a day
number (the number of days since year 0).
mysql>SELECT TO_DAYS(950501);-> 728779 mysql>SELECT TO_DAYS('1997-10-07');-> 729669
TO_DAYS() is not intended for use with
values that precede the advent of the Gregorian calendar
(1582), because it does not take into account the days that
were lost when the calendar was changed. For dates before 1582
(and possibly a later year in other locales), results from
this function are not reliable. See
Section 12.6, “What Calendar Is Used By MySQL?”, for details.
Remember that MySQL converts two-digit year values in dates to
four-digit form using the rules in
Section 11.3, “Date and Time Types”. For example,
'1997-10-07' and
'97-10-07' are seen as identical dates:
mysql> SELECT TO_DAYS('1997-10-07'), TO_DAYS('97-10-07');
-> 729669, 729669
UNIX_TIMESTAMP(),
UNIX_TIMESTAMP(
date)
If called with no argument, returns a Unix timestamp (seconds
since '1970-01-01 00:00:00' UTC) as an
unsigned integer. If UNIX_TIMESTAMP() is
called with a date argument, it
returns the value of the argument as seconds since
'1970-01-01 00:00:00' UTC.
date may be a
DATE string, a DATETIME
string, a TIMESTAMP, or a number in the
format YYMMDD or
YYYYMMDD. The server interprets
date as a value in the current time
zone and converts it to an internal value in UTC. Clients can
set their time zone as described in
Section 5.11.8, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
mysql>SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP();-> 882226357 mysql>SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('1997-10-04 22:23:00');-> 875996580
When UNIX_TIMESTAMP is used on a
TIMESTAMP column, the function returns the
internal timestamp value directly, with no implicit
“string-to-Unix-timestamp” conversion. If you
pass an out-of-range date to
UNIX_TIMESTAMP(), it returns
0.
Note: If you use UNIX_TIMESTAMP() and
FROM_UNIXTIME() to convert between
TIMESTAMP values and Unix timestamp values,
the conversion is lossy because the mapping is not one-to-one
in both directions. For example, due to conventions for local
time zone changes, it is possible for two
UNIX_TIMESTAMP() to map two
TIMESTAMP values to the same Unix timestamp
value. FROM_UNIXTIME() will map that value
back to only one of the original TIMESTAMP
values. Here is an example, using TIMESTAMP
values in the CET time zone:
mysql>SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2005-03-27 03:00:00');+---------------------------------------+ | UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2005-03-27 03:00:00') | +---------------------------------------+ | 1111885200 | +---------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2005-03-27 02:00:00');+---------------------------------------+ | UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2005-03-27 02:00:00') | +---------------------------------------+ | 1111885200 | +---------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT FROM_UNIXTIME(1111885200);+---------------------------+ | FROM_UNIXTIME(1111885200) | +---------------------------+ | 2005-03-27 03:00:00 | +---------------------------+
If you want to subtract UNIX_TIMESTAMP()
columns, you might want to cast the result to signed integers.
See Section 12.8, “Cast Functions and Operators”.
Returns the current UTC date as a value in
'YYYY-MM-DD' or YYYYMMDD
format, depending on whether the function is used in a string
or numeric context.
mysql> SELECT UTC_DATE(), UTC_DATE() + 0;
-> '2003-08-14', 20030814
Returns the current UTC time as a value in
'HH:MM:SS' or HHMMSS
format, depending on whether the function is used in a string
or numeric context.
mysql> SELECT UTC_TIME(), UTC_TIME() + 0;
-> '18:07:53', 180753
UTC_TIMESTAMP,
UTC_TIMESTAMP()
Returns the current UTC date and time as a value in
'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' or
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS format, depending on whether
the function is used in a string or numeric context.
mysql> SELECT UTC_TIMESTAMP(), UTC_TIMESTAMP() + 0;
-> '2003-08-14 18:08:04', 20030814180804
This function returns the week number for
date. The two-argument form of
WEEK() allows you to specify whether the
week starts on Sunday or Monday and whether the return value
should be in the range from 0 to
53 or from 1 to
53. If the mode
argument is omitted, the value of the
default_week_format system variable is
used. See Section 5.2.2, “Server System Variables”.
The following table describes how the
mode argument works.
| First day | |||
| Mode | of week | Range | Week 1 is the first week … |
| 0 | Sunday | 0-53 | with a Sunday in this year |
| 1 | Monday | 0-53 | with more than 3 days this year |
| 2 | Sunday | 1-53 | with a Sunday in this year |
| 3 | Monday | 1-53 | with more than 3 days this year |
| 4 | Sunday | 0-53 | with more than 3 days this year |
| 5 | Monday | 0-53 | with a Monday in this year |
| 6 | Sunday | 1-53 | with more than 3 days this year |
| 7 | Monday | 1-53 | with a Monday in this year |
mysql>SELECT WEEK('1998-02-20');-> 7 mysql>SELECT WEEK('1998-02-20',0);-> 7 mysql>SELECT WEEK('1998-02-20',1);-> 8 mysql>SELECT WEEK('1998-12-31',1);-> 53
Note that if a date falls in the last week of the previous
year, MySQL returns 0 if you do not use
2, 3,
6, or 7 as the optional
mode argument:
mysql> SELECT YEAR('2000-01-01'), WEEK('2000-01-01',0);
-> 2000, 0
One might argue that MySQL should return 52
for the WEEK() function, because the given
date actually occurs in the 52nd week of 1999. We decided to
return 0 instead because we want the
function to return “the week number in the given
year.” This makes use of the WEEK()
function reliable when combined with other functions that
extract a date part from a date.
If you would prefer the result to be evaluated with respect to
the year that contains the first day of the week for the given
date, use 0, 2,
5, or 7 as the optional
mode argument.
mysql> SELECT WEEK('2000-01-01',2);
-> 52
Alternatively, use the YEARWEEK() function:
mysql>SELECT YEARWEEK('2000-01-01');-> 199952 mysql>SELECT MID(YEARWEEK('2000-01-01'),5,2);-> '52'
Returns the weekday index for date
(0 = Monday, 1 =
Tuesday, … 6 = Sunday).
mysql>SELECT WEEKDAY('1998-02-03 22:23:00');-> 1 mysql>SELECT WEEKDAY('1997-11-05');-> 2
Returns the calendar week of the date as a number in the range
from 1 to 53.
WEEKOFYEAR() is a compatibility function
that is equivalent to
WEEK(.
date,3)
mysql> SELECT WEEKOFYEAR('1998-02-20');
-> 8
Returns the year for date, in the
range 1000 to 9999, or
0 for the “zero” date.
mysql> SELECT YEAR('98-02-03');
-> 1998
YEARWEEK(,
date)YEARWEEK(
date,start)
Returns year and week for a date. The
start argument works exactly like
the start argument to
WEEK(). The year in the result may be
different from the year in the date argument for the first and
the last week of the year.
mysql> SELECT YEARWEEK('1987-01-01');
-> 198653
Note that the week number is different from what the
WEEK() function would return
(0) for optional arguments
0 or 1, as
WEEK() then returns the week in the context
of the given year.