I want to display the TIME field from my mysql table on my website, but rather than showing 21:00:00 etc I want to show 8:00 PM. I need a function/code to do this or even any pointers in the right direction. Will mark the first reply with some code as the correct reply.
5 Answers
Check this out: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/date-and-time-functions.html
I'd imagine you'd want date_format().
Example: DATE_FORMAT($date, "%r")
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it will display in AM/PM format. but what if i wanted to input AM/PM format type to mysql time format? Apr 21, 2013 at 10:23
Show the date & time data in AM/PM format with the following example...
SELECT DATE_FORMAT(`t`.`date_field`,'%h:%i %p') AS `date_field` FROM `table_name` AS `t`
OR
SELECT DATE_FORMAT(`t`.`date_field`,'%r') AS `date_field` FROM `table_name` AS `t`
Both are working properly.
You can also select the column as a unix timestamp using MYSQL's UNIX_TIMESTAMP()
function. Then format it in PHP. IMO this is more flexible...
select a, b, c, UNIX_TIMESTAMP(instime) as unixtime;
The in PHP use the date()
function & format it any way you want.
<?php echo date('Y/m/d', $row->unixtime); ?>
The reason I like this method as opposed to formatting it in SQL is b/c, to me, the date's format is a display decision & (in my opinion) formatting the date in SQL feels wrong... why put display logic in your SQL?
Now - if you're not processing the data in PHP and are doing adhoc queries then DATE_FORMAT()
is the way to go. But if you're gonna have the data show up on the web I'd go with UNIX_TIMESTAMP()
and do the formatting in PHP...
I mean... lets say you want to change how the date & time are displayed on the page... wouldn't it feel "off" to have to modify your SQL for a display tweak?
my 2 cents
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I have a class that contains all of my date handling code. In the login code I just call a function from that class which formats the time using DATE_FORMAT(). So it doesn't really show in the display code and doesn't feel off Mysql dates are just more readable than unix timestamps.– AliOct 6, 2008 at 4:13
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+1 for saying "the date's format is a display decision" indeed it is, I agree with you 200% on this May 2, 2013 at 8:42
I had been trying to do the same and got this page returned from a Google search. I worked a solution for the time 21:00:00;
using
DATE_FORMAT(<field>,'%l.%i%p')
which returned 9.00PMputting a
LOWER()
function around it to return 9.00pm
So the full code is; DATE_FORMAT(<field>,'%l.%i%p')
Worked OK for me ...