Hmm. You couldn't do the tagged pointer optimisation in PHP without abstracting zend_string raw character access. PHP expects zstr->val to always work.
@Andrea Why optimize strings though? They live for all of a few milliseconds. Nobody cares if you use an extra few pointers for a few milliseconds. Memory is cheap.
@Andrea The performance problem isn't typically with constants though. The biggest performance issues I often profile in the field have more to do with copying (i.e. lots of string concatenation/manipulation going on).
Not saying it's not worth optimizing, just that that would likely be a bigger win to focus on.
the rage of `TIMESTAMP` is not limited ? DATETIME: '1000-01-01 00:00:00' to '9999-12-31 23:59:59' TIMESTAMP: '1970-01-01 00:00:01' UTC to '2038-01-19 03:14:07' UTC
But, that's what you get when you use a tool that deceives you into believing you are interacting with your database when really all you're doing is interacting with the tool...
@Sajad It doesn't store it like that, but you could certainly format it like that.
@Sajad Solutions infer problems. Since you don't have a problem here, what you probably want is to become more knowledgeable about the subject matter in order to understand how to use it. As suggested earlier by @tereško. I'd suggest for example, you spend a little more time reading the manual to understand how these functions behave in MySQL and the trade-offs of the different data types involved.