MySQL retrieves and displays TIME values in
'HH:MM:SS' format (or
'HHH:MM:SS' format for large hours values).
TIME values may range from
'-838:59:59' to
'838:59:59'. The hours part may be so large
because the TIME type can be used not only to
represent a time of day (which must be less than 24 hours), but
also elapsed time or a time interval between two events (which
may be much greater than 24 hours, or even negative).
MySQL recognizes TIME values in several
formats, described in Section 9.1.3, “Date and Time Literals”.
Some of these formats can include a trailing fractional seconds
part in up to microseconds (6 digits) precision. Although this
fractional part is recognized, it is discarded from values
stored into TIME columns. For information
about fractional seconds support in MySQL, see
Section 11.3.6, “Fractional Seconds in Time Values”.
Be careful about assigning abbreviated values to a
TIME column. MySQL interprets abbreviated
TIME values with colons as time of the day.
That is, '11:12' means
'11:12:00', not
'00:11:12'. MySQL interprets abbreviated
values without colons using the assumption that the two
rightmost digits represent seconds (that is, as elapsed time
rather than as time of day). For example, you might think of
'1112' and 1112 as meaning
'11:12:00' (12 minutes after 11 o'clock), but
MySQL interprets them as '00:11:12' (11
minutes, 12 seconds). Similarly, '12' and
12 are interpreted as
'00:00:12'.
By default, values that lie outside the TIME
range but are otherwise valid are clipped to the closest
endpoint of the range. For example,
'-850:00:00' and
'850:00:00' are converted to
'-838:59:59' and
'838:59:59'. Invalid TIME
values are converted to '00:00:00'. Note that
because '00:00:00' is itself a valid
TIME value, there is no way to tell, from a
value of '00:00:00' stored in a table,
whether the original value was specified as
'00:00:00' or whether it was invalid.
For more restrictive treatment of invalid
TIME values, enable strict SQL mode to cause
errors to occur. See Section 5.1.8, “Server SQL Modes”.