On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 10:43 AM, Miller,
Terion<tmil...@springfi.gannett.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 7/28/09 9:40 AM, "Bastien Koert" <phps...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 10:34 AM, Bob McConnell<r...@cbord.com> wrote:
>> From: Miller, Terion
>> On 7/28/09 8:35 AM, "Ashley Sheridan" <a...@ashleysheridan.co.uk> wrote:
>>
>>> $pastDays = strtotime("-30 days");
>>> $date = date("d/m/y", $pastDays);
>>>
>>> Well I tried and got no results from my query and I know there
>>> results with date ranges in the last 30 days, I basically need
>>> to count backward from now() 30 days I thought strtotime() would
>>> work well..but the fields in the db are varchar not date fields
>>> they are all formatted the same though 00/00/00:
>>
>> If the dates are really stored as varchar, you are doing a lexical
>> comparison on a field that is meaningless in that context. You will need
>> to break the string down somewhere and do three separate comparisons.
>>
>> Bob McConnell
>>
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>>
>>
>
> Teri,
>
> have you considered making the field a date/ datetime type? You could
> add the column, then copy the data over with a sql statement casting
> it to the correct date format you require and then drop the original
> column
>
> --
>
> Bastien
>
> Cat, the other other white meat
>
> I don't think I can this data is being pulled from our county health site, so 
> it comes in how they put it on their page (scraping here)  and I'm grabbing 
> it using regex. (and this is totally public info so it's legit-my employer 
> tells me)
>
>
>

Yep, if you are not in control of the data and are just screenscraping
a site, then you don't have too many choices.

-- 

Bastien

Cat, the other other white meat

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