23

I googled and tried several ways to compare date but unfortunately didn't get the result as expected. I have current state of records like following:

        mysql> select date_format(date(starttime),'%d-%m-%Y') from data;

              +-----------------------------------------+
              | date_format(date(starttime),'%d-%m-%Y') |
              +-----------------------------------------+
              | 28-10-2012                              |
              | 02-11-2012                              |
              | 02-11-2012                              |
              | 02-11-2012                              |
              | 03-11-2012                              |
              | 03-11-2012                              |
              | 07-11-2012                              |
              | 07-11-2012                              |

I would like to compare date and therefore do like this:

        mysql> select date_format(date(starttime),'%d-%m-%Y') from data where date_format(date(starttime),'%d-%m-%y') >= '02-11-2012';
               +-----------------------------------------+
               | date_format(date(starttime),'%d-%m-%Y') |
               +-----------------------------------------+
               | 28-10-2012                              |
               | 02-11-2012                              |
               | 02-11-2012                              |
               | 02-11-2012                              |
               | 03-11-2012                              |
               | 03-11-2012                              |
               | 07-11-2012                              |
               | 07-11-2012                              |

I believe that the result should not include '28-10-2012'. Any suggestion? Thanks in advance.

3 Answers 3

44

Your format is fundamentally not a sortable one to start with - you're comparing strings, and the string "28-10-2012" is greater than "02-11-2012".

Instead, you should be comparing dates as dates, and then only converting them into your target format for output.

Try this:

select date_format(date(starttime),'%d-%m-%Y') from data
where date(starttime) >= date '2012-11-02';

(The input must always be in year-month-value form, as per the documentation.)

Note that if starttime is a DATETIME field, you might want to consider changing the query to avoid repeated conversion. (The optimizer may well be smart enough to avoid it, but it's worth checking.)

select date_format(date(starttime),'%d-%m-%Y') from data
where starttime >= '2012-11-02 00:00:00';

(Note that it's unusual to format a date as d-m-Y to start with - it would be better to use y-M-d in general, being the ISO-8601 standard etc. However, the above code does what you asked for in the question.)

12
  • 1
    @MahmoudGamal: your edit doesn't make sense. Specifying a date literal using the Syntax date '2012-11-02' is valid (in fact it's the SQL standard for specifying date literals). See here: sqlfiddle.com/#!2/d41d8/4020
    – user330315
    Nov 22, 2012 at 7:47
  • @JonSkeet: You can specify a datetime literal using the SQL standard literal as well: timestamp '2012-11-02 00:00:00' (instead of using a "plain" string).
    – user330315
    Nov 22, 2012 at 7:49
  • @a_horse_with_no_name - Sorry, didn't know that. I removed my edit. Nov 22, 2012 at 7:51
  • @a_horse_with_no_name: Yes, I considered that - but as that would then be a timestamp rather than a datetime, I wasn't entirely sure it would be appropriate.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 22, 2012 at 8:23
  • @JonSkeet - Sorry for my edit. There was a voice telling my that it will be a bad idea to edit a code written be Jon Skeet. But I didn't listen to it. Nov 22, 2012 at 8:56
2

Use 2012-11-02 instead of 02-11-2012 and you will not need date_format() anymore

0

Use the following method :

public function dateDiff ($date1, $date2) {
/* Return the number of days between the two dates: */
  return round(abs(strtotime($date1)-strtotime($date2))/86400);
}  
/* end function dateDiff */

It will help!

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