3

I can normally do this but it appears my brain is not functioning well right now and I'm missing something.

Every day via a cron job that is run at 1am, I want to get a count of rows that were inserted yesterday, and the date.

ie

 SELECT DATE(added) as date, COUNT(*) FROM bookings WHERE added = DATE_SUB(NOW(), INTERVAL 1 DAY) GROUP BY date

'added' contains a timestamp ie '2011-04-18 12:31:31'

What am I getting wrong here? I know there are many rows added yesterday but my query is returning 0 results and no mysql_errors :(

Any ideas?

1
  • what is the datatype of field ADDED?
    – heximal
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:01

3 Answers 3

11

Please try

SELECT DATE(added) as yesterday, COUNT(*) FROM bookings WHERE DATE(added) = DATE(DATE_SUB(NOW(), INTERVAL 1 DAY)) GROUP BY yesterday

or perhaps

SELECT DATE(added) as yesterday, COUNT(*) FROM bookings WHERE DATE(added) = DATE_SUB(CURDATE(), INTERVAL 1 DAY) GROUP BY yesterday

Updated Corrected the WHERE part.

4
  • Thanks for that. But 'Unknown column 'yesterday' in 'where clause'' Jun 27, 2011 at 11:11
  • your post though gave me the idea to wrap the WHERE 'added' with DATE() ie SELECT DATE(added) as date, COUNT(*) FROM bookings WHERE DATE(added) = DATE_SUB(CURDATE(), INTERVAL 1 DAY) GROUP BY date Jun 27, 2011 at 11:12
  • Ok.. i'll try running it on some data i got.. 2 sec
    – Phliplip
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:12
  • Ok my fault ;) I was sure that alias's was available in the where part. I get the same error. Happy that you figured it out :)
    – Phliplip
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:15
2

well whatever NOW() is will return the time portion and unless they were added at exactly that time the day before they wont be counted.

So either use BETWEEN and specify time range, or format the date in your query to only match on the day month year components and not time

6
  • thanks for this. if I swap NOW() with CURDATE() shouldn't that fix it? I'm still getting 0 results. The challenge is that this will be a cron job that is run at 1am every morning and so the query will need to be dynamic. How do I do a BETWEEN that always works in this method? Jun 27, 2011 at 11:05
  • 1
    CURDATE still does not equal the values of added CURDATE() != '2011-06-26 12:31:06" for instance
    – mikeq
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:12
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    Either look at DATE_FORMAT function to format the added values to only be Year Month Day, or use the BETWEEN function to to specify a range within which the added value would sit. Using DATE_FORMAT on added will mean it cannot use any indexes you may have on there to speed up queries, so BETWEEN may be a better option if performance is a concern
    – mikeq
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:15
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    apologies, yes DATE(added) should just return the Y M D components, so with CURDATE() it should work. Take out the count(*) and group by clause at the moment and change the where clause to DATE(added) <= ... This should return all records prior to today
    – mikeq
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:25
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    SELECT DATE(added) as date, COUNT(*) FROM bookings WHERE DATE(added) = DATE_SUB(CURDATE(), INTERVAL 1 DAY) GROUP BY date
    – mikeq
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:29
0

WHERE added = does only match exact NOW() - 1 DAY, you should select by a range instead.

2
  • I see... but doesn't the DATE() wrapping the 'added' round it down from an exact timestamp to a date? Jun 27, 2011 at 11:07
  • 1
    No, because you don't compare with the return value of DATE(), see the next answer by Phliplip Jun 27, 2011 at 11:12

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