PHP - Time Issues
Hey I'm having issues with using strtotime(), date(), and time().
I have a couple problems. The first is: I used strtotime to get the unix of a specific date and time (worked great, even outputted the correct time using date() to return it). However when I went to post information on it (I set it up so that you can't post after the event started), it told me it already started like an hour before it was supposed to. I used Code: [Select] if (time() > $event['when']) { echo "too late."; } else { do it } to determine. That had me very confused. Then I decided instead of manually inputting the event times I would pull them from an xml file, which I had no trouble reading. I used: Code: [Select] strtotime("Next $day, $time PM") with $day = Sun, $time = 1:00- This outputted a unix timestamp but then date() returned it as being 7 pm on sunday instead. Any ideas what would be causing these strange things? Similar TutorialsI'm having some trouble understanding how to use date and time when updating my database. The table is already populated with Date and Time fields in date and time format. I need to update the table based on the date and time, but I can't make it work. I tested all the variables and they are being sent correctly. I'm pretty sure the problem lies in how I'm trying to match the Date and Time fields with $dateID and $timeID in the WHERE part of the query, but I'm not sure how to fix that! Code: [Select] <?php include("opendatabase.php"); $size = count($_POST['player1']); $i=0; $thisyear = date("Y"); while ($i < $size) { $dateID = $_POST['date'][$i]; $timeID = $_POST['time'][$i]; $player1 = ($_POST['player1'][$i]); $player2 = ($_POST['player2'][$i]); $player3 = ($_POST['player3'][$i]); $player4 = ($_POST['player4'][$i]); $player5 = ($_POST['player5'][$i]); mysql_query(" UPDATE Daysheets$thisyear SET Player1='$player1', Player2='$player2', Player3='$player3', Player4='$player4', Player5='$player5' WHERE Date = '$dateID' AND Time = '$timeID' "); $i++; } header("Location: /teetimes/publicteetimes.php?teetimedate=$dateID"); mysql_close($con) ?>Any help appreciated! I should also mention that whenever I run this query it erases anything that was previously entered in the database except the date and time columns... I'm working on a project that has a lot of different timezone options, and all I have from the users is their UTC offset. After weeks of doing tweaks, I come to new issues every time I add something, one would think it would be a lot easier to just get the correct time and day :) The latest issue is that when I try to rewrite a date to a better fomat, it disregards the GMT offset. Like this: 4/14/19, 12:00 PM GMT+2 (=$date) becomes ... 14-04-2019 10:00 when using this code: $bp_date_to_format = date_create_from_format('Y-m-d\TH:i:sP', $date); echo date_format($bp_date_to_format, 'd-m-Y H:i'); I figured it would just rewrite the format, keeping the exact time. It isn't. We do have all these sorts of localization functions as well, but because there doesn't seem to be one single standard (each 3rd party API connection we have uses its own default datetime format so it seems). // Remove UTC Text $UTC_offset = str_replace('UTC', '', $timezone); // Get Offset in Minutes if (stripos($UTC_offset, ':') !== false) { // Calculate seconds from offset list($hours, $minutes) = explode(':', $offset); $seconds = $hours * 60 * 60 + $minutes * 60; } else { $seconds = $UTC_offset * 60 * 60; } // Get User timezone name from seconds $timezone = timezone_name_from_abbr('', $seconds, 1); if ($timezone === false) { $timezone = timezone_name_from_abbr('', $seconds, 0); } // Set new TZ return date_default_timezone_set($timezone);
Isn't there any "one way"solution that can be used? It's confusing to say the least.
Cheers. PHP date and time function is not showing correct time on my local system I have the following php code date_default_timezone_set("Africa/Lagos"); $date = date('d-m-y h:i:s'); echo "Server Time ".$date ."<br>"; echo "The time is " . date("h:i:sa")."<br>"; $current_datetime = date("Y-m-d") . ' ' . date("H:i:s", STRTOTIME(date('h:i:sa'))); echo "Current time1: ".$current_datetime . "<br>";
Output
Server Time 21-05-21 09:55:39
Expected Output
Server Time 21-05-21 10:55:39
Any help would be appreciated. Edited May 21 by Ponel Basically I have recently been playing around with parsing a csv file. What I am looking to do at this point is simply take the date/timestamp (part of the csv file), which is in the following format:DD/MM HH:MM:SS.100th/s For the sake of argument, lets say I have this in an array string called $csv[0] and the file has several lines that span the course of a couple hours. I wouldn't mind having to use explode() to breakup/remove the date or 100th/s IF that would make things a lot simpler. So where would I start in trying to achieve this?. The result I am looking for will simply return "X Seconds". Storing this in a string variable would be a bonus, as I plan to use this to divide a separate piece of information. Any examples or ideas would be great. Thank you. ps: Here is an example time from the csv file itself: Code: [Select] 11/19 22:23:18.143 I am trying to simulate an ad expiration and carry out an action if the ad is expired. And I cannot get the if/else to work properly... I've tried many variations and I cannot see what I am doing wrong here. Any tips please 3 hours and counting of no solution! $ad_start = time()-14 . "<br />"; // 14 days from today in the past (negative) echo $ad_start; $current_time = time() . "<br />"; // current epoch time echo $current_time; $days_past = $ad_start - $current_time; // days past echo "<br />$days_past days have past since the ad started!<br />"; if($days_past <= 14) { echo "<br />Ad is less than 14 days. Not expired."; } else { echo "<br />Ad is over 14 days. Expired."; }
What are the differences and implications of UTC time and Zulu time? <?php function getArr(string $time):array { $dateTime = new \DateTime($time); return [ 'time'=>$time, 'timestamp'=> $dateTime->getTimestamp(), 'dateTime' => $dateTime ]; } $arr = getArr('2020-08-05'); $arr_z = getArr('2020-08-05T00:00:00Z'); print_r($arr); print_r($arr_z); echo('equal timestamps: '.($arr['timestamp'] === $arr['timestamp']?'true':'false'));
Array ( [time] => 2020-08-05 [timestamp] => 1596585600 [dateTime] => DateTime Object ( [date] => 2020-08-05 00:00:00.000000 [timezone_type] => 3 [timezone] => UTC ) ) Array ( [time] => 2020-08-05T00:00:00Z [timestamp] => 1596585600 [dateTime] => DateTime Object ( [date] => 2020-08-05 00:00:00.000000 [timezone_type] => 2 [timezone] => Z ) ) equal timestamps: true
This topic has been moved to Application Design. http://www.phpfreaks.com/forums/index.php?topic=316461.0 OK So I've got a datepicker that sends a date in d/m/y format. My DB stores the data in Unix Timestamp Which I can convert the date to with strtotime however this does the exact date & time. All I want is the actual day. I've spent hours trying to convert this with just the day with mixed results... Thanks. I am having a problem with PHP displaying the correct date and time. It updates as it should, but is fast by 4min and is always displaying a date in 2004. I ran a basic php script to make sure the application im using itself is not wrong. go to lunenburgledger.com/time.php Anybody had any ideas on where to check? The system time on the Windows Server 2003 is correct. The only thing I can think of is that it was converted to a virtual machine on vmware esxi, but the system time stayed right. Any ideas? Thanks! PHP 5.2.6 We rent PHP server space on a server in California. Several of my pages generated by PHP show the current date and time, so when the page is printed, the user knows when the data was printed. Our users could be anywhere in the US, I am in Michigan. How do I convert the server time (PDT) into local time, regardless of where the user is? Thanks. Hello, I tried to implement some PHP code to enable a web page to show "Dinner" specials versus "Lunch" specials based on the time. The business is located in the Eastern Time Zone, so I only need to routine to work based on Eastern Time (New York). What I am noticing is that the server is processing the lines of code so fast that the command to establish the correct time for the remaining code is not always being acknowledged. This line of code appears to be processing too fast for the remaining lines of code: date_default_timezone_set ( "America/New_York" ); Is there some additional code I can put in place to make sure the correct time is always ascertained? I need the $hourmin variable to always return a combination of hour + minute based on 24-hour time and Eastern Time zone. My code is as follows: <?php $name8 = file_get_contents("test/special8name.txt"); date_default_timezone_set ( "America/New_York" ); $gethour = date("H"); $getminutes = $gettimedate["minutes"]; $gettimedate = date(); $hourmin = $gethour . $getminutes; $currentday = date("l", time()); $currentdate = date("M j, Y"); if ($hourmin < 1500 && $currentday <> "Saturday" && $currentday <> "Sunday") { echo "<span class=\"namesred\">$name8 </span>"; } else if ( $hourmin > 1500 && $hourmin < 2300 && $currentday <> "Saturday" && $currentday <> "Sunday") { echo "<span class=\"namesblue\">$name8 </span>"; } else if ( $currentday == "Saturday" or $currentday == "Sunday") { echo "<span class=\"namesblue\">$name8 </span>"; } ?> I am making a time clock, and I was wondering what is the best way to calculate the number of hours an employee worked? I have a table called "statuses" it holds names of punch types: - id = the auto_inc - status = "in/out/break/lunch" text statuses - paid = whether or not the punch is paid or not (true/false) I have another table called "logging" This table holds the information about the punch type: - id = the auto_inc - owner = the member id - ip = members ip - inout = the punch type from the statuses table - location = the city/state of where the punch took place - date = the time the member punched Maybe I am over thinking this, but what is the best way to calculate the hours a person has worked? Right now I am getting all the punches for for a particular member between a date range. then loop through the data to display it and passing it to a method in a class called Calc. I want to then add the times from punch in to punch out, then the next punch in to punch out. Any suggestions? Let's say I am buying a share for $10. If I sell the share on the same day BEFORE 3:30PM, it will be sold for $10, but if I keep the share past 3:30PM, I want the code to automatically add $1 (Taxes and such) once in the the price of the share in database, after that no matter how many days pass by, the price will remain the same.
I've thought about CRON jobs, but I have no idea how to make/use them or set them up.
Any direction or help is appreciated.
I have this: $sql = mysqli_query($conn, "SELECT ip , page , CASE WHEN referrer = '' THEN 'N/A' ELSE referrer END as referrer , DATE_FORMAT(date, '%m/%d/%y') as date , TIME_FORMAT(time, '%T') as time FROM tblTraffic ORDER BY date DESC, time DESC"); most of my traffic report contains the correct times, my time, which is CST in the USA. but some records are off by a lot. Does the time() function capture the time of the actual location from which the visitor is coming from? if so, what could I do to return my timezone for any visitor? w3 schools and php.net don't mention this. Hi, The hosting provider for my domain confirm me that the server time is in EST (UTC-5). They also sent me a grab supporting that Code: [Select] server time is now: ---------------------- Sun Nov 7 02:20:01 EST 2010 ------------------- But when I use the following code, the output I get is has 1 hr difference (UTC-6) echo date("d M, Y h:i:s A",time()); Output==> 07 Nov, 2010 01:20:01 AM But it suppose to give the same time as the server, ryt? Can anybody please explain? Thanks, Hey Guys! I have the following doubt. When echoing from Server like this: Code: [Select] echo "time=" . time(); I get the time in the following raw format: 1299272294 I would really like to echo it with this format: Tue Mar 1 23:50:00 GMT-0300 2011 Is there a way I could do that? Really looking forward for some help on this one, Thanks a lot in advance! Cheers! Hey guys, How would I go about subtracting Today from a previous day to find the difference? For example, I want to subtract TODAY from a previous date in my database, to determine if the difference is greater than 1 day. Any ideas? I tried doing the subraction in TIMESTAMPS, but when I convert the date back to Y-m-d H:i:s, I got some weird year and time. heres is my code for time but it ddnt the time i get was not same in my computer Code: [Select] $date = date("y-d-m") . " at " . date("h:i:s"); $time = time(); Hey Guys. I have the following problem on mysql database: With php using $time = time(); I receive for example: 1302638294 I need something more accurate than this because sometimes I receive on my DB the same value (2 times) and it generates some conflicts due to the fact I am using this information to know which user sent some information, first, second, etc... Does anyone have any suggestions on how I can solve this problem? Thanks a lot in advance! Cheers. Sry if this is in the wrong section, im new here. Im trying to display something if the time is greater than TIME_NOW Im currently using something like this: $first = TIME_NOW - (86400*$settings['settings1']); if($first > (86400*$settings['settings2']) { $text = "Display my text here"; } Its hard to explain , but hopefully some of you guys can see what im trying to do Basically i want to call TIME_NOW , let the user set the setting to display the "$text" 5 minutes later. |