Thanks. I'm stuck using 5.1.6. Matijn reply worked by using the unix timestamp.

-----Original Message-----
From: Maciek Sokolewicz [mailto:tula...@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Maciek 
Sokolewicz
Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2011 12:57 PM
To: Marc Fromm
Cc: Floyd Resler
Subject: Re: [PHP] compare dates

On 01-12-2011 02:17, Floyd Resler wrote:
>
> On Nov 30, 2011, at 5:04 PM, Matijn Woudt wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 11:00 PM, Marc Fromm<marc.fr...@wwu.edu>  wrote:
>>> I'm puzzled why the if statement executes as true when the first date 
>>> (job_closedate) is not less than the second date (now).
>>> The if statement claims that "12/02/2011" is less than "11/30/2011".
>>>
>>>                 if (date("m/d/Y",strtotime($jobs_closedate))<= 
>>> date("m/d/Y",strtotime("now"))){
>>
>> You're comparing strings here, try to compare the unix timestamp:
>>
>> if (strtotime($jobs_closedate)<= strtotime("now")){
>>
>> That'll probably do what you want..
>>
>> Matijn
>>
>
> Another way to do it would be:
> if(strtotime($jobs_closedate)<=time()) { }
>
> or
>
> if(date("Y-m-d",strtotime($job_closedate))<=date("Y-m-d",time()) { }
>
> Take care,
> Floyd


As of PHP 5.2.2 direct comparison of DateTime objects is also possible. So:
$closeDate = new DateTime($jobs_closedate); $now = new DateTime('now'); 
if($closeDate < $now) {
    echo $closeDate->format('m/d/Y'); // output in US date format
    echo $now->format('m/d/Y'); // output in US date format
    $error .= "The close date must be later than today's date, " . 
$now->format('m/d/Y') . "\n";
}

This, IMO is a lot prettier.
- Tul



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