ID: 27551
User updated by: daniele at orlandi dot com
Reported By: daniele at orlandi dot com
-Status: Feedback
+Status: Open
Bug Type: Date/time related
Operating System: SuSE Linux 9.0
PHP Version: 4.3.5RC3
New Comment:
Mmmh... do you really need an example script to test a function for two
given values? :)
Well... here is it:
<?
echo "2004-03-11 18:16:07.755155+01 = "
.strtotime("2004-03-11 18:16:07.755155+01")
."<br />";
echo "2004-03-11 18:16:07+01 = "
.strtotime("2004-03-11 18:16:07+01")
."<br />";
?>
Result:
2004-03-11 18:16:07.755155+01 = -1
2004-03-11 18:16:07+01 = 1079025367
Expected result:
2004-03-11 18:16:07.755155+01 = 1079025367
2004-03-11 18:16:07+01 = 1079025367
Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2004-03-10 13:27:38] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Thank you for this bug report. To properly diagnose the problem, we
need a short but complete example script to be able to reproduce
this bug ourselves.
A proper reproducing script starts with <?php and ends with ?>,
is max. 10-20 lines long and does not require any external
resources such as databases, etc.
If possible, make the script source available online and provide
an URL to it here. Try avoid embedding huge scripts into the report.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2004-03-10 11:27:35] daniele at orlandi dot com
Description:
------------
strtotime fails to parse timestamp returned by PostgreSQL in the
default ISO 8601 output due to fractional seconds.
This time stamp is not parsed (invalid):
2004-03-10 16:33:17.11403+01
This is correctly parsed:
2004-03-10 16:33:17+01
Fractional part could be ignored but shouldn't make strtotime consider
the timestamp as invalid.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=27551&edit=1