Here's the expression that also caters for leap years:
YEAR(date1) - YEAR(date2) - (DATE_FORMAT(date1, '%m%d') < DATE_FORMAT(date2, '%m%d'))
This works because the expression (DATE_FORMAT(date1, '%m%d') < DATE_FORMAT(date2, '%m%d'))
is true
if date1 is "earlier in the year" than date2 and because in mysql, true = 1
and false = 0
, so the adjustment is simply a matter of subtracting the "truth" of the comparison.
This gives the correct values for your test cases, except for test #3 - I think it should be "3" to be consistent with test #1:
create table so7749639 (date1 date, date2 date);
insert into so7749639 values
('2011-07-20', '2011-07-18'),
('2011-07-20', '2010-07-20'),
('2011-06-15', '2008-04-11'),
('2011-06-11', '2001-10-11'),
('2007-07-20', '2004-07-20');
select date1, date2,
YEAR(date1) - YEAR(date2)
- (DATE_FORMAT(date1, '%m%d') < DATE_FORMAT(date2, '%m%d')) as diff_years
from so7749639;
Output:
+------------+------------+------------+
| date1 | date2 | diff_years |
+------------+------------+------------+
| 2011-07-20 | 2011-07-18 | 0 |
| 2011-07-20 | 2010-07-20 | 1 |
| 2011-06-15 | 2008-04-11 | 3 |
| 2011-06-11 | 2001-10-11 | 9 |
| 2007-07-20 | 2004-07-20 | 3 |
+------------+------------+------------+
See SQLFiddle
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