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I'm working on an events page where users can create events and their followers can view the event on their events page.

What I would like to do is select all the events from the table where the event date is within this year (2011), so if the date is 2011-03-30 it will display in the March header, but if it's 2012-03-30 it wont display at all until next year.

So overall, I would like all events to display under headers, e.g. January, February, March.

My table structure is thus:

id                             int(11)
event_creator_user_id          int(11)
event_creator_user_username    varchar(255)
event_creator_user_first_name  varchar(255)
event_creator_user_last_name   varchar(255)
event_name                     varchar(255)
event_date                     date
event_time                     time
event_brief_location           varchar(255)
event_location_street          varchar(255)
event_location_town            varchar(255)
event_location_post_code       varchar(255)
event_description              text
event_create_date              datetime
type                           enum('a','b')
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  • I think Treffynnon's approach is pretty good. You can also select the month by using DATE_FORMAT("%m", event_date) (i think it's accomplished faster by MySQL than by PHP - plus more convenient/readable in PHP).
    – Paul Voss
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:47

3 Answers 3

2

I think you are over complicating the problem. This can be solved by simply getting all the events in the current year using MySQLs DATE_FORMAT function and ordering the events by date.

Then in PHP you can simply loop over them and when the month changes print out a heading. The code below should make this clearer.

In PHP:

$conn = mysql_connect("localhost", "mysql_user", "mysql_password");
mysql_select_db("mydbname");

$SQL = "
    SELECT *,
           UNIX_TIMESTAMP(`event_date`) AS event_date_timestamp
    FROM events
    WHERE DATE_FORMAT(event_date, '%Y') = 2011
      AND event_date > NOW()
    ORDER BY event_date ASC";

$result = mysql_query($SQL);

$current_month = '';
while ($event = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {
    $month = date('m', $event['event_date_timestamp']);
    if($current_month != $month) {
        $current_month = $month;
        echo '<h1>' . $current_month . '</h1>';
    }
    echo '<p>' . $event['event_name'] . '</p>';
}
10
  • don't want to sound ungrateful but that didn't help.
    – Frank
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:43
  • 1
    Why not? If you let me know maybe I can improve it for your situation.
    – Treffynnon
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:46
  • I'm a newbie to PHP and I'm confused from your whole code. Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach()
    – Frank
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:47
  • I have updated the code to be a more complete PHP code snippet. For more information on the mysql_* functions please see the manual: php.net/manual/en/function.mysql-fetch-assoc.php
    – Treffynnon
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:53
  • where did the event_date_timestamp come from?
    – Frank
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:55
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You can get the year part of the date using a function. Assuming it's MySQL:

SELECT 
   *,
   MONTH(event_date) AS 'month'
FROM events
WHERE YEAR(event_date) = YEAR(CURDATE())
ORDER BY month ASC
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  • I haven't used MySQL's date structures but after seeing code like this it makes me want to get into it!
    – Tim
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:55
  • These are nice short cuts. I opted to keep it more verbose to demo more functionality, but this is much easier to read!
    – Treffynnon
    Nov 7, 2011 at 17:05
  • Just a warning though: most functions, like those nifty date functions, are vendor/DBMS specific. The bad: your SQL/code is not portable. The good: less network/traffic overhead (client/server passing around parameters) and fast especially with stored procedures/views. The ugly: these things are dependent on server settings (which you might not have control). Always check the manual and server settings. Your server might be running in a different timezone! Another advice on date/time handling: It will save you from a lot of trouble if you deal with date/time in ISO format and in UTC timezone.
    – shimofuri
    Nov 7, 2011 at 17:24
1

In my databases, I store dates as int as the unix timestamp, number of seconds since jan 1 1970. This way, if I want to select a range (such a just the month of March) i can use mktime:

$query = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM `events` WHERE `date` > ".mktime(0,0,0,3,1,2011). " AND `date` < ".mktime(0,0,0,4,1,2011));

You could loop through months this way:

for($i=1; $i<=12; $i++){
   $query = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM `events` WHERE `date` > ".mktime(0,0,0,$i,1,2011). " AND `date` < ".mktime(0,0,0,$i+1,1,2011));
   $monthName = date("F",mktime(0,0,0,$i,1,2011)); // full name of the month; use "M" for short-name
   // ... your code for printing the events here
}

I would help with the date data type but I haven't used it.

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  • 1
    You can also use ORDER BY `date` ASC to get the events in order from first to last.
    – Tim
    Nov 7, 2011 at 16:38

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