Jamie,

mySQL doesn't support triggers, and you'd need them (or a stored
procedure). Surely you could just set both A and B explicitly in your
application logic to the same value though ? Or am I missing your point
?

P

On Fri, 9 Mar 2001, Jamie S Buchanan wrote:

> Hello all,
> I'm a third year uni student in Scotland doing a year long project which
> involves a fair amount of MySQL. I have the following problem and would be
> appreciative if I could get some advice on solving it:
> 
> - in the script I run to create a table how do I code one DateTime field
> to intially be set to a value of another DateTime field?
> 
> More specifically, I have two DateTime fields (A and B), in my creation
> script I want to set the default value of B to the value of A so that
> when I write a new record to the table the position of B can be left
> NULL, or equivalent, but the value of A will be stored in it's place. I
> later on want to change B independently to a different value than A so I
> don't want a strict contraint that they must always be the same.
> 
> Thanks,
> Jamie.
> 
> 
> 
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