I have dates stored in a mysql table, they are set to store as CURRENT TIMESTAMP in each row and are stored as follows:
2010-05-29 01:17:35
You have two solutions :
In PHP code, this would mean using :
echo date('M j Y g:i A', strtotime('2010-05-29 01:17:35'));
Or :
$dt = new DateTime('2010-05-29 01:17:35');
echo $dt->format('M j Y g:i A');
strtotime + date is the solution you'll see used the most ; but it is not the best solution : with those, you'll work on UNIX Timestamps, which means a limited range of dates (from 1970 to 2038, if using 32 bits integers).
ON the other hand, using the DateTime class, there will be no limit to the range of dates you can work with.
echo date('M j Y g:i A', strtotime('2010-05-29 01:17:35'));
http://php.net/manual/en/function.date.php
If you have a DATETIME field in your table and you only want the date field, then:
SELECT DATE_FORMAT(timestamp,'%M %D, %Y') FROM Mytable;
or:
SELECT DATE_FORMAT(timestamp,'%Y-%m-%d') FROM Mytable;
where timestamp is your column name.