On Thu, Oct 25, 2012 at 3:06 PM, Ron Piggott
ron.pigg...@actsministries.org wrote:
Is it possible for PHP to accept the following as a date:
04:11:22 Aug 21, 2011 PDT
so I may output it as:
gmdate(‘Y-m-d H:i:s’)
- I want the time zone included
Sure.
?php
$ds = strtotime('04:11:22
?)
Hope this helps clarify mktime(), strtotime() and date().
-TG
-Original Message-
From: Christopher Weaver [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 01, 2004 7:13 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] Date Manipulation
This code:
echo strtotime(now);
echo
As was already mentioned, mktime() and strtotime() both return a serial
date. I use mktime() a lot to add/subtract days and such. It
automatically compensates for leap days and all that.
Example:
?php
$month = 1;
$day = 31;
$year = 2004;
$serialdate = mktime(0,0,0,$month,$day + 1,$year);
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?
Thanks again.
John Holmes [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL
* 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
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:
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
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