How can I update only the time in an already existing DateTime field in MySQL? I want the date to stay the same.
12 Answers
Try this:
UPDATE yourtable
SET yourcolumn = concat(date(yourcolumn), ' 21:00:00')
WHERE Id = yourid;
-
@user666 Except it looks like jp gave the same answer a year earlier, so imo jp's answer should be accepted. (This is all very old though, Martin probably gave up before any of the correct answers were added.) Feb 25, 2019 at 23:43
UPDATE myTable
SET myDateTime = ADDTIME(DATE(myDateTime), @myTimeSpan)
WHERE id = @id;
Documented on MySQl date functions MySQL docs
-
1SET date= ADDTIME(DATE(date), '02:00:00.999998') Sets the date to '0000-00-00 00:00:' Feb 26, 2013 at 10:21
-
Seems like a better answer than the higher voted ones because it doesn't rely on string formatting.– KC BaltzNov 19, 2020 at 23:02
I have solved in this way:
UPDATE table
SET myDateTime = CONCAT_WS(' ',DATE(myDateTime), CURTIME())
WHERE id = @id;
Obviously you should change CURTIME()
with your desired time.
-
This is very helpful, I was searching this statement for sometime on the net. Thank you ! Feb 13, 2013 at 11:11
Try this:
UPDATE sms
SET entry_period_end_date= entry_period_end_date+INTERVAL 6 Hour
WHERE TIME(entry_period_end_date) = '06:00:00';
This what helped me. I convert time to minutes firstly: 150 for 2:30 am.
UPDATE lesson SET starts_at = DATE_ADD(Date(starts_at), INTERVAL 150 MINUTE)
Minutes are enough accurate for me, though you can use other units: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/date-and-time-functions.html#function_date-add
UPDATE myTable
SET myDateTime = ADDTIME(myDateTime, @myTimeSpan)
WHERE id = @id;
For exact syntax of function, see this.
-
1The
ADDTIME
function adds a time to the the existing. This means that for this to work, you expectmyDateTime
to be have only the date portion set (and time portion is midnight).– aweAug 25, 2009 at 7:48
MySQL DEV page shows functions like subtime
and difftime
A sample code to back the time all posts in 3 hours is above:
UPDATE tablepost SET datepost = SUBTIME( datepost , '0 3:0:0' );
Note that values 0 dont alter the respective field. Take care this code, use select first to test these function.
Reference: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/date-and-time-functions.html#function_subtime
Well, exactly what you are asking for is not possible. The date and time components can't be updated separately, so you have to calculate the new DateTime value from the existing one so that you can replace the whole value.
-
Well it is possible to do it, not specifically targeting the time portion of the datetime field, but you can do something to get the desired result.– aweAug 25, 2009 at 7:58
Asuming you have a DATE field and TIME field and want to inject the time into the date, try this:
UPDATE mytable
SET mydatefield = ADDTIME( DATE_FORMAT(mydatefield,'%Y-%m-%d 00:00:00'), mydatefield)
WHERE myid = ...
I used ADDTIME in the following way
Earlier in my cloud server, the DateTime was set to UTC but after changing the DateTime to Asia/Kolkata ie UTC 5:30 I wanted the same to reflect in my database tables.
I wanted to update the created_at and updated_at column by 5 hours 30 minutes. I did the following
To update all the rows of the table
UPDATE
products
SET
created_at = ADDTIME(created_at, '5:30:0'),
updated_at = ADDTIME(updated_at, '5:30:0')
You can omit the WHERE condition if you want to update all the records, but since my new records were updated with proper values. So only my rows below id less than 2500 must be updated
UPDATE
products
SET
created_at = ADDTIME(created_at, '5:30:0'),
updated_at = ADDTIME(updated_at, '5:30:0')
WHERE
id < 2500;
Entry
SET entry_period_end_date = ADDTIME(entry_period_end_date, INTERVAL 6 Hour) WHERE TIME(entry_period_end_date) = '06:00:00';