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Or use php's date function:

$stamp = "2009-02-02 21:03:52";
print date("d/m/Y", strtotime($stamp));

 

Which would be about 8-10x slower than using MySQL's :)

 

EDIT:

Decided to add an example:

 

SELECT DATE_FORMAT(`datefield`, '%d/%c/%Y') FROM table_name WHERE condition = something;

Yeah but its hardly gonna bring a server crashing down. Take your pick on which method you use.

 

No, it will not. But why not pull the data out how you want it formatted when the tool is right there?

 

That and using MySQL DATE_FORMAT will not have the limits of strtotime, which are limits of the OS. I do not believe on a UNIX system strtotime can go past 2039.

 

Anyhow, not to put you down. Just decided to add my reasoning. Either way works. :)

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