It's a nice shortcut Jim. Never considered that.
Thanks.
On 20 November 2012 21:03, Jim Lucas wrote:
> On 11/12/2012 02:06 AM, Duken Marga wrote:
>
>> Try this:
>>
>> $todaydate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a"));
>> $showenddate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a",
>> strtotime($showsRe
On 11/12/2012 02:06 AM, Duken Marga wrote:
Try this:
$todaydate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a"));
$showenddate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a",
strtotime($showsRecord['end_date'])));
Won't this give you the same results without the extra conversion steps?
$todaydate = date("U");
Dear Duken,
Many thanks for the solution. It worked!
And thanks to everyone else who pitched in with various solutions.
Regards
Terry
On 12 November 2012 10:06, Duken Marga wrote:
> Try this:
>
> $todaydate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a"));
> $showenddate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 5:11 AM, Kanishka wrote:
> if we use a date after 19 January 2038, we can not use 'strtotime' to get
> timestamp.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2038_problem
>
>
Only if you're running 32bit OS. If you're running 64bit OS with 64bit PHP
you can represent about 580 bil
if we use a date after 19 January 2038, we can not use 'strtotime' to get
timestamp.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2038_problem
On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 3:36 PM, Duken Marga wrote:
> Try this:
>
> $todaydate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a"));
> $showenddate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y
Try this:
$todaydate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a"));
$showenddate = strtotime(date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a",
strtotime($showsRecord['end_date'])));
if ($todaydate < $showenddate):
echo "The date of the show has not yet arrived";
else:
echo "The show has ended";
endif;
You must conve
"Terry Ally (Gmail)" hat am 11. November 2012 um 19:30
geschrieben:
> Hi all,
>
> I am having a problem with comparing time. I am using the following:
>
> $todaydate = date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a");
> $showenddate = date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a",
> strtotime($showsRecord['end_date']));
>
> if ($todayda
On 11 Nov 2012, at 19:24, "Terry Ally (Gmail)" wrote:
> I reversed it as you suggested and every future show is displaying as having
> ended.
In that case the code you're showing us is not the code you're running, because
that's the obvious error in test.php.
-Stuart
--
Stuart Dallas
3ft9 L
Stuart,
I reversed it as you suggested and every future show is displaying as
having ended.
Terry
On 11 November 2012 19:11, Stuart Dallas wrote:
> Please include the list when replying.
>
> On 11 Nov 2012, at 19:08, "Terry Ally (Gmail)"
> wrote:
>
> > What I want is the reverse.
> >
> > I wa
Please include the list when replying.
On 11 Nov 2012, at 19:08, "Terry Ally (Gmail)" wrote:
> What I want is the reverse.
>
> I want that if people attempt to access the show page after the show has
> ended that it triggers an error which takes it to another page. The actual
> conditional st
On 11 Nov 2012, at 19:00, "Terry Ally (Gmail)" wrote:
> Hi Shiplu and Stuart,
>
> Comparing timestamps was my first option. I've reinstated it. Have a look
> at http://www.lakesidesurrey.co.uk/test.php (show_source included) and you
> will see that PHP is still outputting the wrong thing.
>
> I
Hi Shiplu and Stuart,
Comparing timestamps was my first option. I've reinstated it. Have a look
at http://www.lakesidesurrey.co.uk/test.php (show_source included) and you
will see that PHP is still outputting the wrong thing.
I just can't figure out what's wrong.
Terry
On 11 November 2012 18:48
On 11 Nov 2012, at 18:30, "Terry Ally (Gmail)" wrote:
> I am having a problem with comparing time. I am using the following:
>
> $todaydate = date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a");
> $showenddate = date("D, M jS, Y g:i:s a",
> strtotime($showsRecord['end_date']));
The date function returns a string.
> if
You can always use timestamp which is integer.
$todaydate = time();
$showenddate = strtotime($showsRecord['end_date']);
On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 12:30 AM, Terry Ally (Gmail) wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am having a problem with comparing time. I am using the following:
>
> $todaydate = date("D, M jS,
At 10:01 AM +0200 9/3/09, J DeBord wrote:
Telling someone RTFM is just rude and mean.
And not taking the time to research your question before posting is
what, thoughtful and kind?
The phrase RTFM is something I don't like to tell people, and from
what I remember, I have never said that to
On Thu, Sep 03, 2009 at 10:20:49AM +0100, Stuart wrote:
> 2009/9/3 J DeBord :
> > Telling someone RTFM is just rude and mean. Manipulating dates and times can
> > be confusing for beginners and experienced people alike. I would suggest
> > that when a question asked here causes you to respond with
2009/9/3 J DeBord :
> Telling someone RTFM is just rude and mean. Manipulating dates and times can
> be confusing for beginners and experienced people alike. I would suggest
> that when a question asked here causes you to respond with RTFM, don't
> respond at all. Save yourself the time and trouble
Telling someone RTFM is just rude and mean. Manipulating dates and times can
be confusing for beginners and experienced people alike. I would suggest
that when a question asked here causes you to respond with RTFM, don't
respond at all. Save yourself the time and trouble and save the person
asking
At 1:01 PM -0400 8/28/09, David Stoltz wrote:
Hey Stuart -
RTFM yourselfI did read it, and obviously misunderstood...
I'm really sorry to bother you. I thought that was what a listserv
like this was for - to ask questions...
I'll try not to ask questions I should know the answer to next
om: Stuart [mailto:stut...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, August 28, 2009 10:19 AM
To: David Stoltz
Cc: php-general@lists.php.net
Subject: Re: [PHP] Date Comparison
2009/8/28 David Stoltz :
> How to I ensure a variable date is not in the past, compared to the
> current date? Here's how I
At 10:12 AM -0400 8/28/09, David Stoltz wrote:
How to I ensure a variable date is not in the past, compared to the
current date? Here's how I'm trying, unsuccessfully:
$nextdate = "8/2/2009";
if(strtotime($nextdate)<=getdate()){
echo "Sorry, your next evaluation date cannot be in the p
2009/8/28 David Stoltz :
> How to I ensure a variable date is not in the past, compared to the
> current date? Here's how I'm trying, unsuccessfully:
>
> $nextdate = "8/2/2009";
>
> if(strtotime($nextdate)<=getdate()){
>
> echo "Sorry, your next evaluation date cannot be in the past,
> Click
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 1:03 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dan I made a solution as below.
>
>
> $time1 = strtotime("$sqldata[CaldTime]");
> $time2 = strtotime("$sqldata[CallEnd]");
> $interval = $time2 - $time1;
> $TLength = date("i:s", strtotime("2008-01-01 01:00:$interval"));
>
> Result
Dan I made a solution as below.
$time1 = strtotime("$sqldata[CaldTime]");
$time2 = strtotime("$sqldata[CallEnd]");
$interval = $time2 - $time1;
$TLength = date("i:s", strtotime("2008-01-01 01:00:$interval"));
Result 01:45
Works perfect for me. Do you agree or disagree dan?
On Mon, Apr 7, 200
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 11:42 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am having a date time comparison issue.
> I have statically set the values here. But the data is fed from the
> database, CaldTime is timestamp and since it will not allow me to have 2
> timestamps in the same table I set the CallE
Thank you that is exactly what i did to figure it out.
Just was having a brain fart there for a minute.
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 11:42 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>t the data is fed from the database, CaldTime is timestamp and since
it will not allow me to have 2 timestamps in
> the same table
Yes my mistake was looking at another record and published another.
But I figured it out now i can publish 1:45 like i wanted. Having a moment
there.
Thank you
Richard L. Buskirk
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 9:42 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am having a date time comparison issue.
I have st
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 11:42 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>t the data is fed from the database, CaldTime is timestamp and since
it will not allow me to have 2 timestamps in
> the same table
?? What database are you using? It sounds like it has a specific
meaning of "timestamp" - probably "the
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 9:42 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am having a date time comparison issue.
> I have statically set the values here. But the data is fed from the
> database, CaldTime is timestamp and since it will not allow me to have 2
> timestamps in the same table I set the CallEnd v
Transmit Report:
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], 402 Local User Inbox Full ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
--- Begin Message ---
BEOI 7308 wrote:
> Hi
>
> I want to substract $first_date to $second_date and print the result
> this way :
>
> xx days, xx hours, xx minutes
>
> i tried (strtotime($second_date)-strtot
BEOI 7308 wrote:
> Hi
>
> I want to substract $first_date to $second_date and print the result
> this way :
>
> xx days, xx hours, xx minutes
>
> i tried (strtotime($second_date)-strtotime($first_date)) but what i
> get is a timestamp and i dont know what to do with it
>
> Is there already a
On Saturday 11 January 2003 21:38, Dhaval Desai wrote:
> Hello ppl,
>
>
> Well, I want to compate date is php, could anybody tell me which is the
> best way to do so? I have tried various ways but nothing seems consistent.
> I tried for example:
> if("2003-1-15" > "2003-1-11")
> {
> echo "true";
>
>- Original Message -
>From: "Dhaval Desai" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Saturday, January 11, 2003 8:38 AM
>Subject: [PHP] Date Comparison
> Well, I want to compate date is php, could anybody tell me which is the
best way to do so?
Look at PHPs date functions http:
Is it too late to change the way you insert dates into the DB? I really
think the unix timestamp is the easiest way to store dates... comparisons
are easy, because everything is in seconds, and using date() gives you the
ability to re-format your dates over and over again for presentation
purposes
> I have a problem here again regarding the date comparison. I need to
> check the most recent date that was entered in mysql database in date
> format ("Y-m-d"), if the datetoday is a day or two days in advanced
> compared to the queried date.
> I need to make sure that the next inserted date in
Thank you Miguel! I was missing the /86400 and it works much better now
:)
On Thu, 9 May 2002, Miguel Cruz wrote:
> On Wed, 8 May 2002, Scott St. John wrote:
> > Sorry to be so thick this morning, but I have a unix time stamp in my MS
> > Sql server that is the date, plus 60 days to expi
On Wed, 8 May 2002, Scott St. John wrote:
> Sorry to be so thick this morning, but I have a unix time stamp in my MS
> Sql server that is the date, plus 60 days to expire a password. I want to
> take today's date and compare to the two to see:
> 1)How many days until the password expires
> 2)If
In my experience, it's best to keep everything is unix time stamp format --
soo easy for comparisons, and the function to convert it out to
-MM-DD took me 45 seconds :)
Justin French
on 30/04/02 6:29 AM, Richard Fox ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> I have a date string, let's call it 'date
You could explode it using the '-' character.. And then compare the first
element to 2038.. If it's equal to our greater than, then you can compare
the month, and so forth..
Rick
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the
source of all true art and all science. He
Are you retrieving the stored date from a mySQL database? If so, you can
let mysql SELECT only those records that fit the tardy date criteria.
-Original Message-
From: ROBERT MCPEAK [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, April 01, 2002 2:22 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PHP] date
> The display works great until I get to the end of the month (like now). I
> have separated the date as three rows in my dB (msg_year, msg_month and
> msg_day)
Don't do that. :-^
> As soon as the next month starts, then I get 4 events.
>
> I know exactly what's wrong, But my non-programmer limi
PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 11:37 PM
> Subject: RE: [PHP] date comparison
>
>
> > > can I used the value from that variables to compare with another
> > > date value? Say another date value I will use is also retrieved
&
The way you want to do this is with UNIX timestamps. FYI a timestamp is the
number of seconds starting at 1970 and going up (it's important to remember
that date - since some people were born before, etc.)
So you need to do this:
$dateA = '12-25-1999';
$dateB = '12-24-1999';
// conve
> may be I did not make my question clear about what I try to
> do. Basically if I have 2 date values in the same format like
> -mm-dd, can I use both values to find out if one come
> before another and then display message or something? Say I
> have $date1 = 20010115 and $date2 = 20010120
;
Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 11:37 PM
Subject: RE: [PHP] date comparison
> > can I used the value from that variables to compare with another
> > date value? Say another date value I will use is also retrieved
> > from a field in table which is in Date data type as well.
>
&g
> can I used the value from that variables to compare with another
> date value? Say another date value I will use is also retrieved
> from a field in table which is in Date data type as well.
When you get into this stuff, it all starts getting a lot more complicated.
If you want to compare tw
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