ID: 30042
Updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reported By: jorge at newsengin dot com
-Status: Open
+Status: Assigned
Bug Type: Date/time related
Operating System: OS X Panther
PHP Version: 5.0.1
-Assigned To:
+Assigned To: derick
New Comment:
I think it's the same bug after all, will add it to my list.
Previous Comments:
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[2004-09-09 21:24:15] jorge at newsengin dot com
Description:
------------
This seems related to the open bug involving "now"
resetting to midnight of the current day, but it's not
identical.
If you try to adjust a time by passing strtotime() an
offset like "+2 hours", you get that offset relative to
midnight. In other words, strtotime("+2 hours",
$unixtimestamp) returns a timestamp for 2 a.m, of the
day referenced by $unixtimestamp, or of the current day
if the second argument is omitted.
Reproduce code:
---------------
// in PHP 4, this correctly returns 3:30 p.m. on Jan 1, 2005 but in PHP
5.0.1 returns 2:00 a.m. on Jan 1, 2005:
$timeStamp = strtotime("+2 hours", strtotime("1/1/2005 1:30pm"));
echo date("r", $timeStamp);
// in PHP 4, this correctly returns a date/time for two hours from now,
but in PHP 5.0.1 it returns 2 a.m. on the current day:
$timeStamp = strtotime("+2 hours");
echo date("r", $timeStamp);
Expected result:
----------------
two hours from given date and time or from now,
depending on whether a second timestamp argument was
provided to strtotime();
Actual result:
--------------
2 a.m. on relevant date.
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Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=30042&edit=1