ID: 13885
Updated by: rasmus
Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Status: Open
Bug Type: Date/time related
Operating System: Windows 2000 SP2
PHP Version: 4.0.6
New Comment:
Ah, ok. Too early in the morning here. Looks like a Windows-specific issue as your
test displays this on my Linux box:
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 16:00:01 -0800
Thu, 1 Jan 1970 00:00:01 +0000
Previous Comments:
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[2001-10-31 07:11:04] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
print(date("r", 1));
Prints: "Thu, 1 Jan 1970 01:00:01 +0100"
This is correct, the local timezone is GMT+1.
print(gmdate("r",1));
Prints: "Thu, 1 Jan 1970 00:00:01 +0100"
This is wrong, it outputs the GMT date & time, but with the timezone "+0100" instead
of "GMT". Thus equaling a date of "Wed, 31 Dec 1969 23:00:01 GMT", which is obviously
not 1 second after the start of the unix epoch.
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[2001-10-31 07:00:49] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I must be missing something here. date('r') is intended to display an RFC822 date
string. Section 5.1 of RFC822 clearly states that +0100 is a perfectly valid way to
represent the timezone. So how is this function not working as expected?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2001-10-31 06:45:57] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The 'r' format string doesn't work as expected:
print(date("r", 1));
Prints: "Thu, 1 Jan 1970 01:00:01 +0100"
print(gmdate("r",1));
Prints: "Thu, 1 Jan 1970 00:00:01 +0100"
I think the '+0100' should've been 'GMT'.
(Done on a system with GMT+1)
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Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=13885&edit=1
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