Here is an example usage of the date() and time() functions:
snippetStart - - - - - -
$timestamp = time();
//echo $timestamp;
$thisYear = date('Y', $timestamp);
echo $thisYear;
- - - - - - snippetEnd
After the PHP upgrade to v5.2.10, this yields "0000" for $thisYear.
Prior to the upgrade, $thisYear would be set to "2009". I also tried
using the time function directly within the date function: $thisYear
= date('Y', time()); Same result.
One other possibly important detail: I've installed a variant: php5
+apache +macosx +mysql5 +t1lib
- Pete O
On Jun 25, 2009, at 10:12 AM, Bradley Giesbrecht wrote:
On Jun 25, 2009, at 7:09 AM, Peter Oakley wrote:
Last night I was upgrading my web server to PHP v5.2.10 (from
v5.2.8) and everything seemed to go ok, no warnings or major
gotchas. But once I began using it, I could see there were some
real problems with the time() and date() functions. It's possible
that I'm just using these two functions in ways that are either
wrong (but have up to now served to accomplish the task I was
seeking to do) or are no longer allowed, for security reasons, in
which case I will need to develop a work-around. Or something is
going wrong with the update. I'm writing to this list to see if
anyone else has experienced this same problem, or if you all might
have some ideas as to what's going on here.
Give an example of your usage of time() and date(), what you expect
and what you are getting.
// Brad
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