A summary of the temporal data types follows. For additional information about properties and storage requirements of the temporal types, see Section 11.3, “Date and Time Types”, and Section 11.8, “Data Type Storage Requirements”. For descriptions of functions that operate on temporal values, see Section 12.7, “Date and Time Functions”.
For the DATE
and
DATETIME
range descriptions,
“supported” means that although earlier values
might work, there is no guarantee.
MySQL permits fractional seconds for
TIME
,
DATETIME
, and
TIMESTAMP
values, with up to
microseconds (6 digits) precision. To define a column that
includes a fractional seconds part, use the syntax
,
where type_name
(fsp
)type_name
is
TIME
,
DATETIME
, or
TIMESTAMP
, and
fsp
is the fractional seconds
precision. For example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (t TIME(3), dt DATETIME(6));
The fsp
value, if given, must be in
the range 0 to 6. A value of 0 signifies that there is no
fractional part. If omitted, the default precision is 0. (This
differs from the standard SQL default of 6, for compatibility
with previous MySQL versions.)
Any TIMESTAMP
or
DATETIME
column in a table can
have automatic initialization and updating properties.
A date. The supported range is
'1000-01-01'
to'9999-12-31'
. MySQL displaysDATE
values in'YYYY-MM-DD'
format, but permits assignment of values toDATE
columns using either strings or numbers.A date and time combination. The supported range is
'1000-01-01 00:00:00.000000'
to'9999-12-31 23:59:59.999999'
. MySQL displaysDATETIME
values in'
format, but permits assignment of values toYYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss
[.fraction
]'DATETIME
columns using either strings or numbers.An optional
fsp
value in the range from 0 to 6 may be given to specify fractional seconds precision. A value of 0 signifies that there is no fractional part. If omitted, the default precision is 0.Automatic initialization and updating to the current date and time for
DATETIME
columns can be specified usingDEFAULT
andON UPDATE
column definition clauses, as described in Section 11.3.4, “Automatic Initialization and Updating for TIMESTAMP and DATETIME”.A timestamp. The range is
'1970-01-01 00:00:01.000000'
UTC to'2038-01-19 03:14:07.999999'
UTC.TIMESTAMP
values are stored as the number of seconds since the epoch ('1970-01-01 00:00:00'
UTC). ATIMESTAMP
cannot represent the value'1970-01-01 00:00:00'
because that is equivalent to 0 seconds from the epoch and the value 0 is reserved for representing'0000-00-00 00:00:00'
, the “zero”TIMESTAMP
value.An optional
fsp
value in the range from 0 to 6 may be given to specify fractional seconds precision. A value of 0 signifies that there is no fractional part. If omitted, the default precision is 0.The way the server handles
TIMESTAMP
definitions depends on the value of theexplicit_defaults_for_timestamp
system variable (see Section 5.1.8, “Server System Variables”).If
explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
is enabled, there is no automatic assignment of theDEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
orON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
attributes to anyTIMESTAMP
column. They must be included explicitly in the column definition. Also, anyTIMESTAMP
not explicitly declared asNOT NULL
permitsNULL
values.If
explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
is disabled, the server handlesTIMESTAMP
as follows:Unless specified otherwise, the first
TIMESTAMP
column in a table is defined to be automatically set to the date and time of the most recent modification if not explicitly assigned a value. This makesTIMESTAMP
useful for recording the timestamp of anINSERT
orUPDATE
operation. You can also set anyTIMESTAMP
column to the current date and time by assigning it aNULL
value, unless it has been defined with theNULL
attribute to permitNULL
values.Automatic initialization and updating to the current date and time can be specified using
DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
andON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
column definition clauses. By default, the firstTIMESTAMP
column has these properties, as previously noted. However, anyTIMESTAMP
column in a table can be defined to have these properties.A time. The range is
'-838:59:59.000000'
to'838:59:59.000000'
. MySQL displaysTIME
values in'
format, but permits assignment of values tohh:mm:ss
[.fraction
]'TIME
columns using either strings or numbers.An optional
fsp
value in the range from 0 to 6 may be given to specify fractional seconds precision. A value of 0 signifies that there is no fractional part. If omitted, the default precision is 0.A year in four-digit format. MySQL displays
YEAR
values inYYYY
format, but permits assignment of values toYEAR
columns using either strings or numbers. Values display as1901
to2155
, and0000
.For additional information about
YEAR
display format and interpretation of input values, see Section 11.3.3, “The YEAR Type”.NoteMySQL 8.0 does not support the
YEAR(2)
data type permitted in older versions of MySQL. For instructions on converting toYEAR(4)
, see YEAR(2) Limitations and Migrating to YEAR(4) in MySQL 5.7 Reference Manual.
The SUM()
and
AVG()
aggregate functions do not
work with temporal values. (They convert the values to numbers,
losing everything after the first nonnumeric character.) To work
around this problem, convert to numeric units, perform the
aggregate operation, and convert back to a temporal value.
Examples:
SELECT SEC_TO_TIME(SUM(TIME_TO_SEC(time_col))) FROM tbl_name;
SELECT FROM_DAYS(SUM(TO_DAYS(date_col))) FROM tbl_name;