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I have a table with a col month listing all twelve months of the year. I would like to order this col with the current month at the bottom and then chronologically so if I ran the query now;

DEC

JAN

FEB

...

SEPT

NOV

Month is in the format MONTHNAME(STR_TO_DATE(U.month, '%m'))

I adapted this from something I found on here but it only helps with ensuring the current month is listed last any ideas?

      ORDER BY (CASE 
           WHEN Month = MONTH(NOW())
           THEN 1
           ELSE 0
       END ) ASC, month ASC
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  • Is this a query you are going to be using repetitively in a production environment, or for some one-off reporting purpose?
    – Mike Brant
    Dec 1, 2012 at 0:03
  • well it will be used on the odd occasion so optimization isn't a huge concern, if that's what your getting at?
    – Ian
    Dec 1, 2012 at 0:22
  • Yes, that is the reason I asked. If you would be doing regular queries on this the answer I would propose would include changing the field type.
    – Mike Brant
    Dec 1, 2012 at 1:11

2 Answers 2

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ORDER BY (CASE 
          WHEN Month = MONTH(NOW())
          THEN 1
          ELSE 0
          END) DESC, month ASC

or:

ORDER BY (CASE 
          WHEN Month = MONTH(NOW())
          THEN 0
          ELSE 1
          END) ASC, month ASC

Either should do the trick.

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  • thanks but both of those but the current month first(at the top) and the rest of the months don't desc above.
    – Ian
    Dec 1, 2012 at 0:37
  • I've updated my orig post could it be that I've formatted the date causing the problems?
    – Ian
    Dec 1, 2012 at 0:49
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If you want to stick with string values for your months, you can make this work with some slight modification. You will likely either need to use full month names, or use the 3 letter abbreviations for all months (I wasn't quite sure what format you were using, since you examples showed abbreviations, yet you also mentioned MONTHNAME() which outputs the full month. Here how it would work

For 3-letter month abbreviation:

ORDER BY (STR_TO_DATE(CONCAT(`month`, ' 01 2012'), '%b %d %Y')) ASC

For full month name:

ORDER BY (STR_TO_DATE(CONCAT(`month`, ' 01 2012'), '%M %d %Y')) ASC

This will convert the month value to a date (by adding day and year) and then sorting.

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  • Thanks for that Mike but i get this error - Incorrect datetime value: '1 01 2012' for function str_to_date
    – Ian
    Dec 1, 2012 at 11:39
  • Sorry yes i'm using the full month name.
    – Ian
    Dec 1, 2012 at 11:40
  • Ok so this works if I use "ORDER BY STR_TO_DATE(Month, '%m') ASC;" but will it always place the current month at the bottom as its December I'm not sure if its ordered last because it the last month or because its the current month?
    – Ian
    Dec 1, 2012 at 14:37

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