You could be correct about the time zone problem in this sql. I'm somewhat of a MySQL newbie -- do you mean the system environment variable or is there a MySQL environment variable for TZ?
Thanks, Kevin -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Benjamin Pflugmann Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2002 6:19 PM To: Kevin Carlson Cc: Mysql Subject: Re: Interesting datetime problem Hi. Maybe your TZ (timezone) environment variable is set to a strange value? If not, could you provide a full example, so that we can try to reproduce it and see whether this is a local behaviour of your machine or a common MySQL behaviour. Bye, Benjamin. On Tue, May 28, 2002 at 01:27:18PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Hi, > > I have an interesting problem when updating columns of type DATETIME. It > seems that exactly one day is subtracted from the DATETIME value that I > submit in an update query. Has anyone encountered this? Any ideas? > > Kevin -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Before posting, please check: http://www.mysql.com/manual.php (the manual) http://lists.mysql.com/ (the list archive) To request this thread, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Trouble unsubscribing? Try: http://lists.mysql.com/php/unsubscribe.php --------------------------------------------------------------------- Before posting, please check: http://www.mysql.com/manual.php (the manual) http://lists.mysql.com/ (the list archive) To request this thread, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Trouble unsubscribing? Try: http://lists.mysql.com/php/unsubscribe.php