Well, apart from the timezone that would in DATE_FORMAT syntax equal:

%W %d %M %Y @ %I:%i%p

If you're willing to be a bit database-specific, use UNIX_TIMESTAMP to get the timestamp in epoch-format and then use POSIX::strftime to format your date.
# epoch-date in $epoch use POSIX; my $formatted_date = POSIX::strftime("%A %d %B %Y @ %I:%M%p %Z",localtime($epoch));
If you want to be as non db-specific as possible, take the advice below and forget UNIX_TIMESTAMP. Just select the timestamp-column and use appropriate date-manipulation module to convert it to epoch-format.

In reply to Re: Re: Re: Formatting MySQL's TIMESTAMP by dempa
in thread Formatting MySQL's TIMESTAMP by rendler

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