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I am using the following select statement to get the number of entries in a database within the last x days, however it doesn't seem to work after the turn of the new year.

SELECT COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM entries WHERE type = 'xxxxx' AND email = '[email protected]' AND date_created >= CURRENT_DATE-'30 days'

The reason I'm using a string for '30 days' is because this is executed as a prepared statement from a PHP script. Is there a reason that this won't traverse correctly into previous years?

The value for 30 days and 7 days is the same, even though there are more entries contained within 7 days than 30.

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  • what is the type of date_created? Jan 3, 2016 at 11:35
  • It's a DATETIME. Fixed this by using DATE_SUB function - about to add an answer. This seems like a bug in MySQL though... Jan 3, 2016 at 11:37

1 Answer 1

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I fixed this by changing the SQL statement to the following:

SELECT COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM entries WHERE type = 'xxxxx' AND email = '[email protected]' AND date_created >= DATE_SUB(CURRENT_DATE, INTERVAL 30 DAY)

This still works with prepared statements (by replacing 30 with ?).

I think this is a bug with MySQL so I'll submit a report, unless anyone can think of a logical reason why the original statement didn't work?

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