The MySQL manual specifies the datetime to be formatted:
'2011-10-02 16:04:32' /* YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS */
But MySQL 5.1 also accepts the ISO 8601 combined date and time format:
'2011-10-02T16:04:32' /* YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS */
I often concatenate a date and time together to make a MySQL datetime datatype, and I worry the space does not look important enough in the concattenation code.
$newdate = $datepart . ' ' . $timepart;
What if someone confuses it for an empty string someday and deletes the space, breaking the application? This looks better to me:
$newdate = $datepart . 'T' . $timepart;
Will MySQL continue to support the ISO 8601 format with the 'T'?
Am I violating a best practice by doing this?