If I have a date like this:
'2013-03-25'
And I want to write a MySQL query with WHERE
is "yesterday", how do I do it?
This should do it:
WHERE `date` = CURDATE() - INTERVAL 1 DAY
curdate()
, not now()
? AFAIK, your code will only work if the time-of-day matches exactly
date
which may not be true. So your suggestion is a good one and is safer so I have edited my answer to use it.
Mar 25, 2013 at 19:21
date
is a DateTime
, it should be DATE(date) = CURDATE - INTERVAL 1 DAY
?
Mar 18, 2014 at 11:36
A simple way to get yesterday's date is to use subdate()
function:
subdate(currentDate, 1)
I think you're looking for:
DATE_ADD(date_column, INTERVAL -1 DAY)
see https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/date-and-time-functions.html
I always have to refer to a code snippet to wrap my head around this again.
It's customary to store datetimes in UTC in the database. But usually, when generating reports, the times need to be adjusted for a specific timezone.
Here's the snippet I use to show selecting yesterday, adjusted for Pacific time:
SET @date_start = DATE_SUB((CURDATE() - INTERVAL 1 DAY), INTERVAL 8 HOUR);
SET @date_end = DATE_SUB(CURDATE(), INTERVAL 8 HOUR);
SELECT
projects.token,
projects.created_at as 'UTC created_at',
DATE_SUB(projects.created_at, INTERVAL 8 HOUR) as 'Pacific created_at'
FROM
projects
WHERE
projects.created_at BETWEEN @date_start AND @date_end;
Note: I set the variables in the snippet so it's easier to look at. When I write the final query, I usually don't use the variables.