Would you recommend using a datetime or a timestamp field, and why (using MySQL)?
I'm working with PHP on the server side.
Would you recommend using a datetime or a timestamp field, and why (using MySQL)?
I'm working with PHP on the server side.
A TIMESTAMP
requires 4 bytes, whereas a DATETIME
requires 8 bytes.
I like a Unix timestamp, because you can convert to numbers and just worry about the number. Plus you add/subtract and get durations, etc. Then convert the result to Date in whatever format. This code finds out how much time in minutes passed between a timestamp from a document, and the current time.
$date = $item['pubdate']; (etc ...)
$unix_now = time();
$result = strtotime($date, $unix_now);
$unix_diff_min = (($unix_now - $result) / 60);
$min = round($unix_diff_min);
TIMESTAMP is useful when you have visitors from different countries with different time zones. you can easily convert the TIMESTAMP to any country time zone
A DATETIME
carries no timezone information with it and will always display the same independent of the timezone that is in effect for the session, which defaults to the server's timezone unless you have explicitly changed it. However, if I initialize a DATETIME
column with a function such as NOW()
rather than a literal such as '2020-01-16 12:15:00'
, then the value stored will, of course, be the current date and time localized to the session's timezone.
A TIMESTAMP
by contrast does implicitly carry timezone information: When you initialize a TIMESTAMP
column with a value, that value is converted to UTC before it is stored. If the value being stored is a literal such as '2020-01-16 12:15:00'
, it is interpreted as being in the session's current timezone for conversion purposes. Conversely, when a TIMESTAMP
column is displayed, it will first be converted from UTC to the session's current timezone.
When to use one or the other? A Case Study
A Website for a community theater group is presenting several performances of a play for which it is selling tickets. The dates and times of these performances will appear in a drop down from which a customer wishing to buy tickets for a performance will select one. It would make sense for database column performance_date_and_time
to be a DATETIME
type. If the performance is in New York, there is an understanding that there is an implicit timezone involved ("New York local time") and ideally we would want the date and time to display as 'December 12, 2019 at 8:00 PM' regardless of the session's timezone and without having to go to the trouble of having to do any timezone conversions.
On the other hand, once the December 12th, 2019 8 PM performance began, we might no longer want to sell tickets for it and thus no longer display that performance in the drop down. So, we would like to be able to know whether '2019-12-12 20:00:00' has occurred or not. That would argue for having a TIMESTAMP
column, setting the timezone for the session to 'America/New_York' with set session time_zone='America/New_York'
and then storing '2019-12-12 20:00:00'
into the TIMESTAMP
column. Henceforth we can test for whether the performance has begun by comparing this column with NOW()
independent of the current session timezone.
Or it might make sense to have a DATETIME
and a TIMESTAMP
column for these two separate purposes. Or not. Clearly, either one could serve both purposes. If you go with just a DATETIME
column, then you must set the current timezone to your local timezone before comparing with NOW()
. If you go with just a TIMESTAMP
column, you must set the session timezone to your local timezone before displaying the column.
time_zone
but the session time_zone
(which defaults to the server time_zone
until changed explicitely). Never rely in your app on a default that might change.
"... setting the the server's timezone for the session ...".
Perhaps it could have been expressed more clearly by just saying "setting the timezone for the session",but in the end this will be the timezone that the server will be using. I will update the answer to make this clearer.
I merely use unsigned BIGINT
while storing UTC ...
which then still can be adjusted to local time in PHP.
the DATETIME
to be selected with FROM_UNIXTIME( integer_timestamp_column )
.
one obviously should set an index on that column, else there would be no advance.
A lot of answers here suggest to store as timestamp in the case you have to represent well defined points in time. But you can also have points in time with datetime if you store them all in UTC by convention.
time_zone
is not UTC
too, you will have surprises (bugs) if you use MySQL date/time functions such as NOW()
, DATE_ADD
without converting timezone first... So why make database interaction more complicated than necessary?
Not mentioned so far, is that DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP only works with Timestamp, but not DateTime type fields.
This becomes relevant for MS Access tables which can only use DateTime but not Timestamp.
DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
support for a DATETIME
is added in MySQL 5.6.
Mar 27, 2017 at 7:59
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
have the same meaning as CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
. These are CURRENT_TIMESTAMP(), NOW(), LOCALTIME, LOCALTIME(), LOCALTIMESTAMP
, and LOCALTIMESTAMP()
." -> mysql docs
Apr 26, 2018 at 15:20
If you want to GUARANTEE your application will NOT function in February, 2038, use TIMESTAMP. Refer to your REFMAN for the RANGE of dates supported.
The DATETIME type is used for values containing date and time parts. MySQL retrieves and displays DATETIMEvalues in format. The supported range is . 'YYYYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss' '1000-01-01 00:00:00''9999-12-31 23:59:59'
The TIMESTAMP data type is used for values containing date and time parts. TIMESTAMP has a range from '1970-01-01 00:00:01'UTC to '2038-01-19 03:14:07'UTC.
mysql> SELECT col,
> CAST(col AT TIME ZONE INTERVAL '+00:00' AS DATETIME) AS ut
> FROM ts ORDER BY id;
+---------------------+---------------------+
| col | ut |
+---------------------+---------------------+
| 2020-01-01 10:10:10 | 2020-01-01 15:10:10 |
| 2019-12-31 23:40:10 | 2020-01-01 04:40:10 |
| 2020-01-01 13:10:10 | 2020-01-01 18:10:10 |
| 2020-01-01 10:10:10 | 2020-01-01 15:10:10 |
| 2020-01-01 04:40:10 | 2020-01-01 09:40:10 |
| 2020-01-01 18:10:10 | 2020-01-01 23:10:10 |
+---------------------+---------------------+
URL MySQL 8.0 : https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/datetime.html
timestamp
is a current time of an event recorded by a computer through Network Time Protocol (NTP).
datetime
is a current timezone that is set in your PHP configuration.