NAME

DateTime::Format::MySQL - Parse and format MySQL dates and times

SYNOPSIS

use DateTime::Format::MySQL;

my $dt = DateTime::Format::MySQL->parse_datetime( '2003-01-16 23:12:01' );

# 2003-01-16 23:12:01
DateTime::Format::MySQL->format_datetime($dt);

DESCRIPTION

This module understands the formats used by MySQL for its DATE, DATETIME, TIME, and TIMESTAMP data types. It can be used to parse these formats in order to create DateTime objects, and it can take a DateTime object and produce a string representing it in the MySQL format.

METHODS

This class offers the following methods. All of the parsing methods set the returned DateTime object's time zone to the floating time zone, because MySQL does not provide time zone information.

  • parse_datetime($string)

  • parse_date($string)

  • parse_timestamp($string)

    Given a value of the appropriate type, this method will return a new DateTime object.

    If given an improperly formatted string, this method may die.

  • format_date($datetime)

  • format_time($datetime)

  • format_datetime($datetime)

    Given a DateTime object, this methods returns an appropriately formatted string.

SUPPORT

Support for this module is provided via the datetime@perl.org email list. See http://lists.perl.org/ for more details.

AUTHOR

Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2003 David Rolsky. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.

SEE ALSO

datetime@perl.org mailing list

http://datetime.perl.org/

1 POD Error

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 171:

You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'