Sorry about that.   Works great with date.

Thanks.

"Matthew Weier O'Phinney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message 
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>* Christopher Weaver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> This code:
>>
>> echo strtotime("now");
>> echo mktime("Ymd", strtotime("now"));
>>
>> is producing this result:
>>
>> 1101945775
>> Warning: mktime(): Windows does not support negative values for this
>> function ...
>>  -1
>>
>> What am I doing wrong?
>
> Using the wrong function, or providing the wrong arguments. From the
> arguments you're giving mktime, I suspect you actually want date(),
> which would yield a string in the format 'YYYMMDD'. However, if you
> really want to use mktime, you should be be using it as follows:
>
> int mktime ( [int $hour], [int $minute], [int $second], [int $month],
>    [int $day], [int $year], [int $is_dst] )
>
> Please read the manual entries for the functions you're using before
> posting to the list.
>
>> "John Holmes" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> > Christopher Weaver wrote:
>> > > I've looked at the date functions in the manual but can't find what I
>> > > need. All I want to do is add and subtract days without ending up 
>> > > with
>> > > bogus date values.  IOW, Nov. 29 + 7 days shouldn't be Nov. 36.
>> > >
>> > > Just a nod in the write direction would be great.
>> >
>> > mktime() or strtotime()
>
> -- 
> Matthew Weier O'Phinney           | mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Webmaster and IT Specialist       | http://www.garden.org
> National Gardening Association    | http://www.kidsgardening.com
> 802-863-5251 x156                 | http://nationalgardenmonth.org 

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