Sorry all. If I wore my glasses, and wasn't in such a rush, nobody would
look like an idiot. My most humble appologies for wasting everyone's
valuable time.



                                                                                       
                             
                    Bug Database                                                       
                             
                    <php-dev@list        To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]              
                             
                    s.php.net>           cc:                                           
                             
                                         Subject:     PHP 4.0 Bug #9519 Updated: 
Incorrect output from date         
                    03/05/01             function                                      
                             
                    03:01 AM                                                           
                             
                                                                                       
                             
                                                                                       
                             




ID: 9519
Updated by: mrobinso
Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Old-Status: Open
Status: Bogus
Bug Type: Date/time related
Assigned To:
Comments:

On the other hand, if I read these reports more carefully
I would look less like an idiot.



Previous Comments:
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[2001-03-04 19:56:30] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Changing back to open.
This is a valid bug report.

The snippet provided outputs the following in
php-4.0.4pl1 and php-4.0.4dev:

Sunday, March 04, 2001
             ^^^^

Sunday, March 3, 2001
             ^^^

There can't be two Sundays in March, one on the 4th
and the other the 3rd. Not in PHP anyway. Maybe ASP.







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

[2001-03-04 18:34:16] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PHP is performing as documented. You want 'j' not 'n'. See the date manual
page :

d - day of the month, 2 digits with leading zeros; i.e. "01" to "31"
j - day of the month without leading zeros; i.e. "1" to "31"
n - month without leading zeros; i.e. "1" to "12"







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

[2001-03-02 11:16:50] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
My bad disregard...month...oops.

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

[2001-03-02 11:16:16] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jani,

I believe he is refering to the fact the dates are wrong numerically not
typographically.

I get this same result too on PHP 4.0.4pl1 and 4.0.5-dev.

-Chris


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

[2001-03-02 09:28:58] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
It's not wrong, it's exactly what it should be outputting.
Please read the manual page for date:

http://www.php.net/date

where it says:

n - month without leading zeros; i.e. "1" to "12"


--Jani


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