There's a small note in the documentation for the DATE_FORMAT() about MySQL allowing incomplete dates:
Ranges for the month and day specifiers begin with zero due to the
fact that MySQL permits the storing of incomplete dates such as
'2014-00-00'.
As pointed out by @wonk0, MySQL will sets invalid dates to 0000-00-00 00:00:00
when ALLOW_INVALID_DATES
is not set. However, even when ALLOW_INVALID_DATES
is not set, inserting a valid year with month and day set to zero does not appear to trigger this behaviour - at least not in my testing (MySQL 5.1.54-1ubuntu4). I have used this feature before without any problem, but I have so far been unable to find any more detailed documentation that describes this behaviour in full.
Date/Time comparisons also appear to work as expected: for example, 2011-01-00 > 2011-00-00
and 2011-00-01 > 2011-00-00
do as you would expect.
UPDATE
See this answer (by another Mike) to a similar question. It points to an extract from The Definitive Guide to MySQL 5:
In older versions of MySQL, the DATE and DATETIME data types did only
a limited amount of type checking. Values between 0 and 12 for
months, and 0 and 31 for days were generally allowed. However, it is
the responsibility of the client program to provide correct data. (For
example, 0 is a permissible value for a month or day, in order to
provide the possibility of storing incomplete or unknown data.)
Beginning with MySQL 5.0.2, there is a more thorough validation, so
that only valid data can be stored. Still allowed are the month and
day values 0, as well as the date 0000-00-00.
SELECT mydate FROM tableA
?