ID:               18177
 Comment by:       kwils13 at hotmail dot com
 Reported By:      ph at cpen dot com
 Status:           Bogus
 Bug Type:         Date/time related
 Operating System: w2k
 PHP Version:      4.2.1
 New Comment:

I've experienced the same thing (redhat)

int strtotime ( string time [, int now])

... will try to parse that format into a Unix timestamp RELATIVE TO THE
TIMESTAMP GIVEN IN NOW, OR THE CURRENT TIME IF NONE IS SUPPLIED. (sorry
wasn't sure how else to give emphasis)

echo date("m/d/Y h:i:s",time());
#result: 10/10/2004 10:14:31

echo date("m/d/Y h:i:s",strtotime("+ 1 hour", time()));
#result: 10/10/2004 01:00:00
#expected: 10/10/2004 11:14:31

echo date("m/d/Y h:i:s",strtotime("+ 1 hour"));
#result: 10/10/2004 01:00:00
#expected: 10/10/2004 11:14:31

it appears that strtotime always returns the date at midnight
(00:00:00) and is in fact, not relative to the timestamp given in now
or the current time if none is supplied.  Suggesting that the second
argument seems to have no effect.


Previous Comments:
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[2002-07-05 05:43:55] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sorry, but the bug system is not the appropriate forum for asking
support questions. Your problem does not imply a bug in PHP itself.
For a list of more appropriate places to ask for help using PHP,
please visit http://www.php.net/support.php

Thank you for your interest in PHP.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-07-05 05:42:24] ph at cpen dot com

The second argument for strtotime seems to have no effect.
strtotime("2001-02-02 12:01:01",500);
strtotime("2001-02-02 12:01:01",1000);
strtotime("2001-02-02 12:01:01",time());
strtotime("2001-02-02 12:01:01");
all gives the same output.

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