I tried that a big no go.
Seems if I do a +1 i get 2 months from now and a -1 gives me the current month.


$month = date("F", mktime(0,0,0, date('m'), date('d'), date('Y')));
$zomonth = date("F", mktime(0,0,0, date("m")-1, date("d"), date("Y")));
$nmonth = date("F", mktime(0,0,0, date(m)+1, date(d), date("Y")));


$month echo's MARCH should be Feb
$zomonth echo's MARCH should be March
$nmonth echo's MAY this should be April

You will notice i used all options apostrophes double quotes and no quotes 
exactly the same output.







You need apostrophes (or quotes) around your args to date() in the
parameters...

date('m')

As it stands now, PHP assumes you mean the constant m
(http://php.net/define) and that's not defined, so they are all 0.

So you are passing in 0 to ALL the args.

You also should use E_ALL for your error_reporting so you would SEE
the error messages telling you about this.

On Mon, March 31, 2008 2:07 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Not understanding why this is happening.
>
> $month = date("F", mktime(0,0,0, date(m), date(d), date(Y)));
> $zomonth = date("F", mktime(0,0,0, date(m)-1, date(d), date(Y)));
>
> echoing out the exact same month
> March
> March
>
> Checked server timezone/date/time all is good. Am I half asleep at the
> wheel on this one and just not seeing my mistake here?
>
>
> Richard L. Buskirk
>
> Hardware Failure: $4,000.
> Network Outage: $15,000.
> Always blaming the programmers for everything: Priceless.
>
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> PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
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>
>


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http://cdbaby.com/from/lynch
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