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Last updated: Sat, 17 Jul 2004
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XVII. 날짜와 시간 함수

소개

이 함수들은 PHP가 실행되고 있는 서버로부터 날짜와 시간을 얻을 수 있게 합니다. 여러가지 다른 방법으로 날짜와 시간 출력을 형식화할 수 있습니다.

참고: 이 함수들은 서버의 지역설정에 의존한다는 점을 명심하십시오. 특히 윤년과 일광 절약 시간을 생각해서 작업하십시오.

요구 사항

이 확장 모듈을 빌드할 때 외부 라이브러리가 필요하지 않습니다.

설치

이 함수들은 설치하지 않아도 사용할 수 있습니다; PHP 코어의 일부입니다.

런타임 설정

이 확장 모듈은 php.ini 설정이 존재하지 않습니다.

리소스 종류

이 확장 모듈은 리소스형을 정의하지 않습니다.

상수 정의

이 확장 모듈은 상수를 정의하지 않습니다.

차례
checkdate -- 그레고리안력 날짜를 확인합니다.
date -- 로컬 날짜/시간을 형식화합니다.
getdate -- 날짜/시간 정보를 가져온다
gettimeofday -- Get current time
gmdate -- Format a GMT/UTC date/time
gmmktime -- Get Unix timestamp for a GMT date
gmstrftime --  Format a GMT/UTC time/date according to locale settings
idate --  Format a local time/date as integer
localtime -- Get the local time
microtime --  Return current Unix timestamp with microseconds
mktime -- Get Unix timestamp for a date
strftime --  Format a local time/date according to locale settings
strtotime --  Parse about any English textual datetime description into a Unix timestamp
time -- Return current Unix timestamp


add a note add a note User Contributed Notes
날짜와 시간 함수
alex dot stevenson at t8design dot com
13-Sep-2006 02:20
A few months late on this, but I just saw cepercival at thatMailThatsHot dot com 's post, and think that it may be a bit easier to just use this as opposed to writing it by hand:

date("z:H:i:s", $endTimestamp - $startTimestamp);

Since the timestamps store seconds from the unix epoch, and the unix epoch occured at the very beginning of a year, you can get away with this.

It gets a little trickier to place the years, but it should work fine if you subtract out the number of years date("Y", 0) returns.  This would naturally require two seperate calls to the date function- one to find the year, and one to find the rest of the information.
cepercival at thatMailThatsHot dot com
11-Jul-2006 10:01
Hopefully this may be useful to someone out there!
I wanted a simple function to give me a duration for phone calls using a start timestamp and end timestamp. After finding an understandable example here http://www.brenlei.com/articles/php/dates/dates4.php i cobbled this together:

function callDuration($dateTimeBegin,$dateTimeEnd) {
      
     $dif=$dateTimeEnd - $dateTimeBegin;

     $hours = floor($dif / 3600);
     $temp_remainder = $dif - ($hours * 3600);
      
     $minutes = floor($temp_remainder / 60);
     $temp_remainder = $temp_remainder - ($minutes * 60);
      
     $seconds = $temp_remainder;
        
     // leading zero's - not bothered about hours
     $min_lead=':';
     if($minutes <=9)
       $min_lead .= '0';
     $sec_lead=':';
     if($seconds <=9)
       $sec_lead .= '0';
      
  // difference/duration returned as Hours:Mins:Secs e.g. 01:29:32

  return $hours.$min_lead.$minutes.$sec_lead.$seconds;
      
       }

obviously it can be easily extended to include days, weeks etc.
Stupidly simple I know but that's how i like it.
gary at gmartellino dot com
05-May-2006 03:05
here's a quick script i used to find recurring dates, it offers some flexibility in how you want to iterate though the dates

<?php

// ----------------------------------------------------------
//  Recurring dates
//  Returns an array of recurring dates
// ----------------------------------------------------------

class recur {
  
   var
$endOption;        // set to either "endBy" or "endAfter" -- endby if you want to end by a date and
                       // end after if you want to end after 'x' amount of occurrences
  
var $endValue;      // set to either a date in 'xxxx-xx-xx' format or a number of occurrences
  
var $start;            // set to the starting date in 'xxxx-xx-xx' format
  
  
function interval($type, $spread){
      
$startDate = explode("-", $this->start);
      
$time = mktime(0, 0, 0, $startDate[1], $startDate[2], $startDate[0]);
          
      
$dates[] = $this->start;
      
       if(
$this->endOption == "endAfter"){
          
           for(
$i = 1; $i < $this->endValue; $i++){
              
$futureTime = strtotime("+$spread $type", $time);
              
$dates[] = date("Y-m-d", $futureTime);
              
$time = $futureTime;
           }
          
           return
$dates;
       }else if(
$this->endOption == "endBy"){
          
$endDate = explode("-", $this->endValue);
          
$endTime = mktime(0, 0, 0, $endDate[1], $endDate[2], $endDate[0]);
          
           while(
$endTime > $time){
              
$futureTime = strtotime("+$spread $type", $time);
               if(
$futureTime > $endTime){
                   break;
               }
              
$dates[] = date("Y-m-d", $futureTime);
              
$time = $futureTime;
           }
           return
$dates;
       }
   }
  
}
?>
example:

<?php
include("includes/recur.class.php");

$recur = new recur();
$recur->endOption = "endBy";
$recur->endValue = '2006-12-09';
$recur->start = '2006-04-28';

print_r($recur->interval("day", 4));
?>
rugby7s at gmail dot com
09-Mar-2006 01:30
I had same problem nickaubert  had with trying to compute timestamp for a span of dates that was daylight savings compliant.

OLD CODE:
 /***********************************************
*Note - This is the old code that doesn't handle daylights savings time
***********************************************/
for($i=$start_date; $i<=$end_date; $i=($i+(24*60*60))){
 //--- DO something $i is timestamp
}
 

NEW CODE:
for($i=$start_date;$i<=$end_date;
$i=(mktime(0,0,0,date('n',$i),date('d',$i)+1,date('Y',$i)))){
 //--- DO something $i is timestamp
}
04-Mar-2006 02:20
A quick one liner to round a timestamp to the next full hour.

ie, 8:36 => 9:00, 9:02 => 10:00

$timestamp = ceil(time()/3600)*3600;
worm (zantATglazovDOTnet)
26-Jan-2006 01:14
Function for converting  RFC 2822 formatted date to timestamp
<?php

/**
 * @param  string  $date RFC 2822 formatted date
 * @return integer timestamp
 */

function Rfc2822ToTimestamp($date){
 
$aMonth = array(
            
"Jan"=>"1", "Feb"=>"2", "Mar"=>"3", "Apr"=>"4", "May"=>"5",
            
"Jun"=>"6", "Jul"=>"7", "Aug"=>"8", "Sep"=>"9", "Oct"=>"10",
            
"Nov"=>"11", "Dec"=>"12");

  list( ,
$day, $month, $year, $time) = explode(" ", $date);
  list(
$hour, $min, $sec) = explode(":", $time);
 
$month = $aMonth[$month];

  return
mktime($hour, $min, $sec, $month, $day, $year);
}
?>
Jeff
04-Nov-2005 01:59
Here is a somewhat simpler function for getting the number of  business days between two dates

<?php

function WorkDays( $startTime, $endTime )
{
  
$workdays = 0 ;
   while(
$startTime <= $endTime )
   {
       if(
date('w', $startTime ) != 6 && date( 'w', $startTime) != 0 )
       {
          
$workdays++ ;
       }
      
$startTime += 86400 ;
   }
   return
$workdays ;
}

?>
cupidomind at yahoo dot fr
15-Oct-2005 12:48
Hi I just want to say thanks a lot to the man who wrote a solution about a problem of the date-difference.

/*A much easier way to do days diff is to use Julian Days from the Calendar functions:

$start = gregoriantojd($smon, $sday, $syear);
$end = gregoriantojd($emon, $eday, $eyear);
$daysdiff = $end - $start;

You can see the obvious ways to wrap a function around that.*/
rycker+phpdate at gmail dot com
05-Oct-2005 05:00
Function for converting MySQL timestamp to Datetime format

function TimestampToDatetime($Tstamp) {
   $dt[0] = substr($Tstamp,0,4);
   $dt[1] = substr($Tstamp,4,2);
   $dt[2] = substr($Tstamp,6,2);
   $tm[0] = substr($Tstamp,8,2);
   $tm[1] = substr($Tstamp,10,2);
   $tm[2] = substr($Tstamp,12,2);
   return (join($dt,"-") . " " . join($tm,":"));
}
andreencinas at yahoo dot com dot br
28-Sep-2005 09:38
//function like dateDiff Microsoft
       //not error in year Bissesto

       function dateDiff($interval,$dateTimeBegin,$dateTimeEnd) {
         //Parse about any English textual datetime
         //$dateTimeBegin, $dateTimeEnd

         $dateTimeBegin=strtotime($dateTimeBegin);
         if($dateTimeBegin === -1) {
           return("..begin date Invalid");
         }

         $dateTimeEnd=strtotime($dateTimeEnd);
         if($dateTimeEnd === -1) {
           return("..end date Invalid");
         }

         $dif=$dateTimeEnd - $dateTimeBegin;

         switch($interval) {
           case "s"://seconds
               return($dif);

           case "n"://minutes
               return(floor($dif/60)); //60s=1m

           case "h"://hours
               return(floor($dif/3600)); //3600s=1h

           case "d"://days
               return(floor($dif/86400)); //86400s=1d

           case "ww"://Week
               return(floor($dif/604800)); //604800s=1week=1semana

           case "m": //similar result "m" dateDiff Microsoft
               $monthBegin=(date("Y",$dateTimeBegin)*12)+
                 date("n",$dateTimeBegin);
               $monthEnd=(date("Y",$dateTimeEnd)*12)+
                 date("n",$dateTimeEnd);
               $monthDiff=$monthEnd-$monthBegin;
               return($monthDiff);

           case "yyyy": //similar result "yyyy" dateDiff Microsoft
               return(date("Y",$dateTimeEnd) - date("Y",$dateTimeBegin));

           default:
               return(floor($dif/86400)); //86400s=1d
         }

       }
glashio at xs4all dot nl
27-Sep-2005 05:16
Calculate Sum BusinessDays (Mon till Fri) between two date's :

<?php
function businessdays($begin, $end) {
  
$rbegin = is_string($begin) ? strtotime(strval($begin)) : $begin;
  
$rend = is_string($end) ? strtotime(strval($end)) : $end;
   if (
$rbegin < 0 || $rend < 0)
       return
0;

  
$begin = workday($rbegin, TRUE);
  
$end = workday($rend, FALSE);

   if (
$end < $begin) {
      
$end = $begin;
      
$begin = $end;
   }

  
$difftime = $end - $begin;
  
$diffdays = floor($difftime / (24 * 60 * 60)) + 1;

   if (
$diffdays < 7) {
      
$abegin = getdate($rbegin);
      
$aend = getdate($rend);
       if (
$diffdays == 1 && ($astart['wday'] == 0 || $astart['wday'] == 6) && ($aend['wday'] == 0 || $aend['wday'] == 6))
           return
0;
      
$abegin = getdate($begin);
      
$aend = getdate($end);
      
$weekends = ($aend['wday'] < $abegin['wday']) ? 1 : 0;
   } else
      
$weekends = floor($diffdays / 7);
   return
$diffdays - ($weekends * 2);
}

function
workday($date, $begindate = TRUE) {
  
$adate = getdate($date);
  
$day = 24 * 60 * 60;
   if (
$adate['wday'] == 0) // Sunday
      
$date += $begindate ? $day : -($day * 2);
   elseif (
$adate['wday'] == 6) // Saterday
      
$date += $begindate ? $day * 2 : -$day;
   return
$date;
}
?>
Eric Z (ezsomething at hotmail)
01-Sep-2005 07:26
I was having a horrible time trying to get a good list of timezones, how to set them locally (for the user/client), and how best to keep this information. Building on the notes of this site (thanks everyone), I constructed code that should work on just about any un*x based platform.  It reads the local timezone table and gives your a nested array of the continents and regions of the file -- the natural continent sorting is even by the most populated areas (thanks Paul Eggert!).

Afterwards, all you have to do is export the timezone string with an environmental set.. which works just fine if php is running as an apache model; haven't tested it for commandline, but I suspect it's okay there, too.

<?php
if (isset($_SESSION[PROFILE_TZOFFSET]))
      
putenv('TZ='.$_SESSION[PROFILE_TZOFFSET]);
?>

Here's how to load the timezones... the nested array makes it easy to insert into html lists or other well-behaved objects.

<?php
  
function getTimezoneData() {
    
//EricZ - 9/1/05 - free to use, keep the comments :)
    
$zoneNames = array();

    
// -- first part, gather all of the zone data
    
$zoneSource = '/usr/share/zoneinfo/zone.tab';
    
$zoneHandle = fopen($zoneSource, "r");
     if (!
$zoneHandle) return NULL;                  //bad file, abort now
    
while (!feof($zoneHandle)) {
      
$zoneLine = ltrim(fgets($zoneHandle, 4096));
       if (
$zoneLine[0]=='#')  continue;          //skip comments
         //Columns...
         // 1.  ISO 3166 2-character country code.
         // 2.  Latitude and longitude of the zone's principal location
         // 3.  Zone name used in value of TZ environment variable.
         // 4.  Comments; present if and only if country has multiple rows.
      
$zoneParts = explode("\t",$zoneLine);      //grab parts
      
if (count($zoneParts) < 3) continue;      //erroneous line!
      
$nameParts = explode('/', $zoneParts[2], 2);  //grab country/name
      
$zoneKey = $nameParts[0];                  //country or area

      
$insertArray = &$zoneNames;                //where to insert?
      
if (count($nameParts) > 1) {                //area/populous
        
if (!isset($zoneNames[$zoneKey]))        //not set before
          
$zoneNames[$zoneKey] = array();
        
$insertArray = &$zoneNames[$zoneKey];    //grab sub (country)
        
$zoneKey = trim($nameParts[1]);          //grab correct key
      
}
      
$zoneKey = preg_replace('/[_]/',' ', $zoneKey);
      
$insertArray[$zoneKey] = trim($zoneParts[2]); //actually set data
    
}                                            //end while not eof
    
fclose($zoneHandle);
     return
$zoneNames;
   }
?>
daniel at globalnetstudios dot com
09-Jun-2005 04:19
This dateDiff() function can take in just about any timestamp, including UNIX timestamps and anything that is accepted by strtotime(). It returns an array with the ability to split the result a couple different ways. I built this function to suffice any datediff needs I had. Hope it helps others too.

<?php
 
/********* dateDiff() function **********
   * returns Array of Int values for difference between two dates
   * $date1 > $date2 --> positive integers are returned
   * $date1 < $date2 --> negative integers are returned
   *
   * $split recognizes the following:
   *  'yw' = splits up years, weeks and days (default)
   *  'y'  = splits up years and days
   *  'w'  = splits up weeks and days
   *  'd'  = total days
   *
   * examples:
   *  $dif1 = dateDiff() or dateDiff('yw')
   *  $dif2 = dateDiff('y')
   *  $dif3 = dateDiff('w')
   *  $dif4 = dateDiff('d')
   *
   * assuming dateDiff returned 853 days, the above
   * examples would have a print_r output of:
   *  $dif1 == Array( [y] => 2 [w] => 17 [d] => 4 )
   *  $dif2 == Array( [y] => 2 [d] => 123 )
   *  $dif3 == Array( [w] => 121 [d] => 6 )
   *  $dif4 == Array( [d] => 847 )
   *
   * note: [h] (hours), [m] (minutes), [s] (seconds) are always returned as elements of the Array
   */
 
function dateDiff($dt1, $dt2, $split='yw') {
  
$date1 = (strtotime($dt1) != -1) ? strtotime($dt1) : $dt1;
  
$date2 = (strtotime($dt2) != -1) ? strtotime($dt2) : $dt2;
  
$dtDiff = $date1 - $date2;
  
$totalDays = intval($dtDiff/(24*60*60));
  
$totalSecs = $dtDiff-($totalDays*24*60*60);
  
$dif['h'] = $h = intval($totalSecs/(60*60));
  
$dif['m'] = $m = intval(($totalSecs-($h*60*60))/60);
  
$dif['s'] = $totalSecs-($h*60*60)-($m*60);
  
// set up array as necessary
  
switch($split) {
   case
'yw': # split years-weeks-days
    
$dif['y'] = $y = intval($totalDays/365);
    
$dif['w'] = $w = intval(($totalDays-($y*365))/7);
    
$dif['d'] = $totalDays-($y*365)-($w*7);
     break;
   case
'y': # split years-days
    
$dif['y'] = $y = intval($totalDays/365);
    
$dif['d'] = $totalDays-($y*365);
     break;
   case
'w': # split weeks-days
    
$dif['w'] = $w = intval($totalDays/7);
    
$dif['d'] = $totalDays-($w*7);
     break;
   case
'd': # don't split -- total days
    
$dif['d'] = $totalDays;
     break;
   default:
     die(
"Error in dateDiff(). Unrecognized \$split parameter. Valid values are 'yw', 'y', 'w', 'd'. Default is 'yw'.");
   }
   return
$dif;
  }
?>
mail at completeideas dot com
07-Jun-2005 06:25
For those who are using pre MYSQL 4.1.1, you can use:

TO_DAYS([Date Value 1])-TO_DAYS([Date Value 2])

For the same result as:

DATEDIFF([Date Value 1],[Date Value 2])
r00t_ at mail dot ru
06-May-2005 05:03
Function generate one month calendar like

February
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
               1  2  3  4
   5  6  7    8  9    10  11
 12  13  14  15  16  17 18
 19  20  21  22  23  24 25
 26  27  28

(default in russian locale)

<?php

$year
= (int)$_GET["year"];
$month = (int)$_GET["month"];

draw_month_cal($year, $month);

function
draw_month_cal($year, $month, $locale = array ('ru_RU.CP1251', 'rus_RUS.1251'))
{
   if (
checkdate($month, 1, $year) && setlocale (LC_TIME, $locale)) {
  
       if (!
$day = date("w", $f_day = mktime(0, 0, 0, $month, 1, $year)))
          
$day = 7; // Mon first, Sun last
      
      
print "<table border=0><tr><th colspan=7>" . strftime("%B", $f_day) . "</td></tr><tr>"; // Month
      
      
for ($i = 8; --$i;)
           print
"<th>" . strftime("%a", mktime(0, 0, 0, $month, 16 - $i - $day, $year)) . "</th>"; // Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun 
          
      
print "</tr><tr>" . str_repeat("<td></td>", --$day); // Empty cells
      
      
while (checkdate($month, ++$i, $year)) { // $i==0 after for :-)
          
print "<td>$i</td>";
           if (!(++
$day % 7)) print "</tr><tr>"; // next line after Sun
      
}
       print
"</tr></table>";
   }
}

?>
info at programare dot org
06-May-2005 03:04
A simple DateAdd() function:

function DateAdd($v,$d=null , $f="d/m/Y"){
  $d=($d?$d:date("Y-m-d"));
  return date($f,strtotime($v." days",strtotime($d)));
}

Then use it:

echo DateAdd(2);  // 2 days after
echo DateAdd(-2,0,"Y-m-d");  // 2 days before with gigen format
echo DateAdd(3,"01/01/2000");  // 3 days after given date
datavortex at gmail dot com
19-Mar-2005 09:49
This is a litttle function I cobbled together from my own code, and snippets from this site to calculate the difference between two datetimes without having to confine it to simply one interval.  This will tell you how many weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds there are between the given datetimes, and also makes a little English string you can use.

This could easily be expanded to include months, and years, but I didn't want to have to deal with any of the leap year and variable month length stuff.

<?
function dateDiff($dateTimeBegin,$dateTimeEnd) {
  $dateTimeBegin =strtotime($dateTimeBegin);
  $dateTimeEnd  =strtotime($dateTimeEnd);

  if($dateTimeEnd === -1 || $dateTimeBegin === -1) {
   # error condition
   return false;
  }

  $diff = $dateTimeEnd - $dateTimeBegin;

  if ($diff < 0) {
   # error condition
   return false;
  }

  $weeks = $days = $hours = $minutes = $seconds = 0; # initialize vars

  if($diff % 604800 > 0) {
   $rest1  = $diff % 604800;
   $weeks  = ($diff - $rest1) / 604800; # seconds a week
   if($rest1 % 86400 > 0) {
     $rest2 = ($rest1 % 86400);
     $days  = ($rest1 - $rest2) / 86400; # seconds a day
     if( $rest2 % 3600 > 0 ) {
       $rest3 = ($rest2 % 3600);
       $hours = ($rest2 - $rest3) / 3600; # seconds an hour
       if( $rest3 % 60 > 0 ) {
         $seconds = ($rest3 % 60);
         $minutes = ($rest3 - $seconds) / 60;  # seconds a minute
       } else {
         $minutes = $rest3 / 60;
       }
     } else {
       $hours = $rest2 / 3600;
     }
   } else {
     $days = $rest1/ 86400;
   }
  }else {
   $weeks = $diff / 604800;
  }

  $string = array();
  if($weeks > 1) {
   $string[]  = "$weeks weeks";
  } elseif ($weeks == 1) {
   $string[]  = "a week";
  }
  if($days > 1) {
   $string[] = "$days days";
  } elseif($days == 1) {
   $string[] = "a day";
  }
  if($hours > 1) {
   $string[] = "$hours hours";
  } elseif ($hours == 1) {
   $string[] = "an hour";
  }
  if($minutes > 1) {
   $string[] = "$minutes minutes";
  } elseif ($minutes == 1) {
   $string[] = "a minute";
  }
  if($seconds > 1) {
   $string[] = "$seconds seconds";
  } elseif($seconds == 1) {
   $string[] = "a second";
  }

  # join together all the strings in the array above except the last element
  $text  = join(', ', array_slice($string,0,sizeof($string)-1)) . ", and ";
  $text .= array_pop($string);  # put the last one on after the and
 
  return array($text, $weeks, $days, $hours, $minutes, $seconds);
?>
JMPZ art JMPZ dort ORG
04-Mar-2005 03:01
If you are dealing with a date in a database, you could just use the mysql function DATEDIFF(expr1,expr2) To calculate the difference without big bulky php functions.
andreencinas at yahoo dot com dot br
19-Jan-2005 03:26
//function like dateDiff Microsoft
       //bug update for previous

       function dateDiff($interval,$dateTimeBegin,$dateTimeEnd) {
         //Parse about any English textual datetime
         //$dateTimeBegin, $dateTimeEnd

         $dateTimeBegin=strtotime($dateTimeBegin);
         if($dateTimeBegin === -1) {
           return("..begin date Invalid");
         }

         $dateTimeEnd=strtotime($dateTimeEnd);
         if($dateTimeEnd === -1) {
           return("..end date Invalid");
         }

         $dif=$dateTimeEnd - $dateTimeBegin;

         switch($interval) {
           case "s"://seconds
               return($dif);

           case "n"://minutes
               return(floor($dif/60)); //60s=1m

           case "h"://hours
               return(floor($dif/3600)); //3600s=1h

           case "d"://days
               return(floor($dif/86400)); //86400s=1d

           case "ww"://Week
               return(floor($dif/604800)); //604800s=1week=1semana

           case "m": //similar result "m" dateDiff Microsoft
               $monthBegin=(date("Y",$dateTimeBegin)*12)+
                 date("n",$dateTimeBegin);
               $monthEnd=(date("Y",$dateTimeEnd)*12)+
                 date("n",$dateTimeEnd);
               $monthDiff=$monthEnd-$monthBegin;
               return($monthDiff);

           case "yyyy": //similar result "yyyy" dateDiff Microsoft
               return(date("Y",$dateTimeEnd) - date("Y",$dateTimeBegin));

           default:
               return(floor($dif/86400)); //86400s=1d
         }

       }
Elizalde Baguinon
08-Jan-2005 01:16
I evaluated the modified version of Xiven's datediff (below) and I saw some errors. I switched the lines of getting the seconds and the formatting of date. I was testing the datediff() function with a "d" interval. Here I added my test code.

$dateA = "2004-12-31";
$dateB = "2005-01-01";

function datediff($interval, $date1, $date2) {
   // Function roughly equivalent to the ASP "DateDiff" function
 
   /* Get the seconds first */
   $seconds = strtotime($date2) - strtotime($date1);

   $date1=date("Y-m-d", strtotime($date1));
   $date2=date("Y-m-d",strtotime($date2));
 
   switch($interval) {
       case "y":
           list($year1, $month1, $day1) = split('-', $date1);
           list($year2, $month2, $day2) = split('-', $date2);
           $time1 = (date('H',$date1)*3600) + (date('i',$date1)*60) + (date('s',$date1));
           $time2 = (date('H',$date2)*3600) + (date('i',$date2)*60) + (date('s',$date2));
           $diff = $year2 - $year1;
           if($month1 > $month2) {
               $diff -= 1;
           } elseif($month1 == $month2) {
               if($day1 > $day2) {
                   $diff -= 1;
               } elseif($day1 == $day2) {
                   if($time1 > $time2) {
                       $diff -= 1;
                   }
               }
           }
           break;
       case "m":
           /* parses the year, month and days. split() was replaced with explode(), PHP Manual says it's faster */
           list($year1, $month1, $day1) = explode('-', $date1);
           list($year2, $month2, $day2) = explode('-',$date2);

           $time1 = (date('H',$date1)*3600) + (date('i',$date1)*60) + (date('s',$date1));
           $time2 = (date('H',$date2)*3600) + (date('i',$date2)*60) + (date('s',$date2));
          
           $diff = ($year2 * 12 + $month2) - ($year1 * 12 + $month1);

           if($day1 > $day2) {
               $diff -= 1;
           } elseif($day1 == $day2) {
               if($time1 > $time2) {
                   $diff -= 1;
               }
           }
           break;
       case "w":
           // Only simple seconds calculation needed from here on
           $diff = floor($seconds / 604800);
           break;
       case "d":
           $diff = floor($seconds / 86400);
           break;
       case "h":
           $diff = floor($seconds / 3600);
           break;     
       case "i":
           $diff = floor($seconds / 60);
           break;     
       case "s":
           $diff = $seconds;
           break;     
   }
   //return the +ve integer only
   if ($diff<0){
     $diff=0-$diff;
   }
   return $diff;
}

echo "x: $dateA<br>";
echo "y: $dateB<br>";
echo "<br>";

echo datediff ("d",$dateA, $dateB);
Ruby
07-Jan-2005 02:39
just modified from Xiven

function datediff($interval, $date1, $date2) {
   // Function roughly equivalent to the ASP "DateDiff" function
  
   //set the date format first
   $date1= date("Y-m-d", strtotime($date1));
   $date2= date("Y-m-d",strtotime($date2));
  
   $seconds = $date2 - $date1;
  
   switch($interval) {
       case "y":
           list($year1, $month1, $day1) = split('-', $date1);
           list($year2, $month2, $day2) = split('-', $date2);
           $time1 = (date('H',$date1)*3600) + (date('i',$date1)*60) + (date('s',$date1));
           $time2 = (date('H',$date2)*3600) + (date('i',$date2)*60) + (date('s',$date2));
           $diff = $year2 - $year1;
           if($month1 > $month2) {
               $diff -= 1;
           } elseif($month1 == $month2) {
               if($day1 > $day2) {
                   $diff -= 1;
               } elseif($day1 == $day2) {
                   if($time1 > $time2) {
                       $diff -= 1;
                   }
               }
           }
           break;
       case "m":
           list($year1, $month1, $day1) = split('-', $date1);
           list($year2, $month2, $day2) = split('-',$date2);
           $time1 = (date('H',$date1)*3600) + (date('i',$date1)*60) + (date('s',$date1));
           $time2 = (date('H',$date2)*3600) + (date('i',$date2)*60) + (date('s',$date2));
           $diff = ($year2 * 12 + $month2) - ($year1 * 12 + $month1);
           if($day1 > $day2) {
               $diff -= 1;
           } elseif($day1 == $day2) {
               if($time1 > $time2) {
                   $diff -= 1;
               }
           }
           break;
       case "w":
           // Only simple seconds calculation needed from here on
           $diff = floor($seconds / 604800);
           break;
       case "d":
           $diff = floor($seconds / 86400);
           break;
       case "h":
           $diff = floor($seconds / 3600);
           break;       
       case "i":
           $diff = floor($seconds / 60);
           break;       
       case "s":
           $diff = $seconds;
           break;       
   }
   //return the +ve integer only
   if ($diff <0)
   {
           $diff= 0-$diff;
   }
   return $diff;
}
mincklerstraat at softhome dot net
11-Oct-2004 06:13
Before you get too advanced using date functions, be sure also to see the calendar functions at http://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.calendar.php .
charles at etherscapes dot com
04-Jun-2004 09:24
There are two dates that I know of that produce an incorrect result for the date functions above: 2004-04-04 and 2004-04-05. The days difference is zero instead of one.
jens at jebecs dot de
03-Jun-2004 08:59
There is an error in vincentv's post from 07-Feb-2001 11:23:
In function dayDiff(..) the return statement must be replaced by:
<?
return ( (getYear($timestamp1)*365 + $dayInYear1) -
         (getYear($timestamp2)*365 + $dayInYear2) );
?>
nickaubert at america's biggest isp dot com
13-Apr-2004 05:43
I ran into an issue using a function that loops through an array of dates where the keys to the array are the Unix timestamp for midnight for each date.  The loop starts at the first timestamp, then incremented by adding 86400 seconds (ie. 60 x 60 x 24).  However, Daylight Saving Time threw off the accuracy of this loop, since certain days have a duration other than 86400 seconds.  I worked around it by adding a couple of lines to force the timestamp to midnight at each interval.

<?php
  $ONE_DAY
= 90000// can't use 86400 because some days have one hour more or less
 
for ( $each_timestamp = $start_time ; $each_timestamp <= $end_time ; $each_timestamp +=  $ONE_DAY) {

  
/*  force midnight to compensate for daylight saving time  */
  
$this_timestamp_array = getdate( $each_timestamp );
  
$each_timestamp = mktime ( 0 , 0 , 0 , $this_timestamp_array[mon] , $this_timestamp_array[mday] , $this_timestamp_array[year] );

    
// do some stuff...
 
}
?>
pk_jsp at rediffmail dot com
12-Apr-2004 04:36
Just want to add a comment to the function datediff given by Xiven that simple difference of 2 dates as in
 $seconds = $date2 - $date1; will nor work instead the following need to be used.
 $seconds = strtotime($date2) - strtotime($date1);
scott_webster_2000 at yahoo dot com
21-Feb-2004 04:32
Here is a slight improvement over wwb_99@yahoo's entry.  (It works now.)

function date_diff($earlierDate, $laterDate) {
  //returns an array of numeric values representing days, hours, minutes & seconds respectively
  $ret=array('days'=>0,'hours'=>0,'minutes'=>0,'seconds'=>0);

  $totalsec = $laterDate - $earlierDate;
  if ($totalsec >= 86400) {
   $ret['days'] = floor($totalsec/86400);
   $totalsec = $totalsec % 86400;
  }
  if ($totalsec >= 3600) {
   $ret['hours'] = floor($totalsec/3600);
   $totalsec = $totalsec % 3600;
  }
  if ($totalsec >= 60) {
   $ret['minutes'] = floor($totalsec/60);
  }
  $ret['seconds'] = $totalsec % 60;
  return $ret;
}
php at sarge dot ch
28-Jan-2004 11:28
Additional thisone here (didn't test it yet but should work :D):

<?php
/**
 * Calculates the Difference between two timestamps
 *
 * @param integer $start_timestamp
 * @param integer $end_timestamp
 * @param integer $unit (default 0)
 * @return string
 * @access public
 */
function dateDifference($start_timestamp,$end_timestamp,$unit= 0){
 
$days_seconds_star= (23 * 56 * 60) + 4.091; // Star Day
 
$days_seconds_sun= 24 * 60 * 60; // Sun Day
 
$difference_seconds= $end_timestamp - $start_timestamp;
  switch(
$unit){
   case
3: // Days
    
$difference_days= round(($difference_seconds / $days_seconds_sun),2);
     return
'approx. '.$difference_hours.' Days';
   case
2: // Hours
    
$difference_hours= round(($difference_seconds / 3600),2);
     return
'approx. '.$difference_hours.' Hours';
   break;
   case
1: // Minutes
    
$difference_minutes= round(($difference_seconds / 60),2);
     return
'approx. '.$difference_minutes.' Minutes';
   break;
   default:
// Seconds
    
if($difference_seconds > 1){
       return
$difference_seconds.' Seconds';
     }
     else{
       return
$difference_seconds.' Second';
     }
  }
}
?>
wwb_99 at yahoo dot com
26-Jan-2004 07:42
Handy little function getting the total difference in dates.

function DateDiff($tfirst, $tsecond)
{
   //returns an array with numeric values for in an array measuring days, hours, minutes & seconds
   $ret=array();
   $totalsec=$tsecond-$tfirst;
   $ret['days']=round(($totalsec/86400));
   $totalsec=$totalsec % 86400;
   $ret['hours']=round(($totalsec/3600));
   $totalsec=$totalsec % 3600;
   $ret['minutes']=round(($totalsec/60));
   $ret['seconds']=$totalsec % 60;
   return $ret;
}
php at elmegil dot net
21-Dec-2003 05:10
A much easier way to do days diff is to use Julian Days from the Calendar functions:

$start = gregoriantojd($smon, $sday, $syear);
$end = gregoriantojd($emon, $eday, $eyear);
$daysdiff = $end - $start;

You can see the obvious ways to wrap a function around that.
vincentv at thevoid dot demon dot nl
20-Nov-2003 08:26
A rectification to the some of the functions i posted a while ago.

They do not work correctly under all circumstances (in my small test cases they worked) which is due to the fact that when you create a date using mktime, which returns a certain amount of seconds, this is not valid for every month since each month has a different amount of seconds.

The solution is to break up the original timestamp, add to it's seperate parts and create a new timestamp.

Old:
=====
function sub($timestamp, $seconds,$minutes,$hours,$days,$months,$years) {
   $mytime = mktime(1+$hours,0+$minutes,0+$seconds,1+$months,1+$days,1970+$years);
   return $timestamp - $mytime;
}
function add($timestamp, $seconds,$minutes,$hours,$days,$months,$years) {
   $mytime = mktime(1+$hours,0+$minutes,0+$seconds,1+$months,1+$days,1970+$years);
   return $timestamp + $mytime;
}
=====

New:
=====
function add($timestamp, $seconds, $minutes, $hours, $days, $months, $years) {
   $timePieces = getdate($timestamp);
   return mktime(    $timePieces["hours"] + $hours,
                   $timePieces["minutes"] + $minutes,
                   $timePieces["seconds"] + $seconds,
                   $timePieces["mon"] + $months,
                   $timePieces["mday"] + $days,
                   $timePieces["year"] + $years );
}
function sub($timestamp, $seconds, $minutes, $hours, $days, $months, $years) {
   $timePieces = getdate($timestamp);
   return mktime(    $timePieces["hours"] - $hours,
                   $timePieces["minutes"] - $minutes,
                   $timePieces["seconds"] - $seconds,
                   $timePieces["mon"] - $months,
                   $timePieces["mday"] - $days,
                   $timePieces["year"] - $years );
}
=====

Regards,
- Vincent
CodeDuck at gmx dot net
08-Nov-2003 01:00
in reply to dkan at netscreen dot com 29-Aug-2003 07:40
> Zero-padding is easier to read and less complicated if you
> use the substr() function instead of an if-then statement.

my two versions of printtime with padding:

<?
function printtime() {
   $timenow = getdate();
   printf(
     '%02d %02d %02d',
     $timenow["hours"],
     $timenow["minutes"],
     $timenow["seconds"]
   );
}
?>

or the better one:
<?
function printtime() {
   echo date('H i s');
}
?>
Xiven
02-Oct-2003 10:39
One thing PHP really lacks IMHO is an equivalent of ASP's "DateDiff" function.  Here's a function that comes close to duplicating the functionality:

<?php
function datediff($interval, $date1, $date2) {
  
// Function roughly equivalent to the ASP "DateDiff" function
  
$seconds = $date2 - $date1;
  
   switch(
$interval) {
       case
"y":
           list(
$year1, $month1, $day1) = split('-', date('Y-m-d', $date1));
           list(
$year2, $month2, $day2) = split('-', date('Y-m-d', $date2));
          
$time1 = (date('H',$date1)*3600) + (date('i',$date1)*60) + (date('s',$date1));
          
$time2 = (date('H',$date2)*3600) + (date('i',$date2)*60) + (date('s',$date2));
          
$diff = $year2 - $year1;
           if(
$month1 > $month2) {
              
$diff -= 1;
           } elseif(
$month1 == $month2) {
               if(
$day1 > $day2) {
                  
$diff -= 1;
               } elseif(
$day1 == $day2) {
                   if(
$time1 > $time2) {
                      
$diff -= 1;
                   }
               }
           }
           break;
       case
"m":
           list(
$year1, $month1, $day1) = split('-', date('Y-m-d', $date1));
           list(
$year2, $month2, $day2) = split('-', date('Y-m-d', $date2));
          
$time1 = (date('H',$date1)*3600) + (date('i',$date1)*60) + (date('s',$date1));
          
$time2 = (date('H',$date2)*3600) + (date('i',$date2)*60) + (date('s',$date2));
          
$diff = ($year2 * 12 + $month2) - ($year1 * 12 + $month1);
           if(
$day1 > $day2) {
              
$diff -= 1;
           } elseif(
$day1 == $day2) {
               if(
$time1 > $time2) {
                  
$diff -= 1;
               }
           }
           break;
       case
"w":
          
// Only simple seconds calculation needed from here on
          
$diff = floor($seconds / 604800);
           break;
       case
"d":
          
$diff = floor($seconds / 86400);
           break;
       case
"h":
          
$diff = floor($seconds / 3600);
           break;       
       case
"i":
          
$diff = floor($seconds / 60);
           break;       
       case
"s":
          
$diff = $seconds;
           break;       
   }   
   return
$diff;
}
?>
dkan at netscreen dot com
30-Aug-2003 06:10
Zero-padding is easier to read and less complicated if you use the substr() function instead of an if-then statement.

function printtime() {
   $timenow = getdate();
   $hours = substr("0" . $timenow["hours"], -2);
   $minutes = substr("0" . $timenow["minutes"], -2);
   $seconds = substr("0" . $timenow["seconds"], -2);

   print($hours . " " . $minutes . " " . $seconds);
}
bitbuster at example dot com
25-Jul-2003 12:31
If you have to compare timestamps, I suggest you do it inside the database.. postgres, for example, allows statements like this:

select (current_timestamp < (select zeitdatum from time_test where zahl=5) );
menaurus at gmx dot de
16-Jul-2003 09:07
The argument has to be in the standard mysql format (y-m-d)...

function age($date) {

if (!$date) return false;
$year=0+substr($date,0,4);
$month=0+substr($date,5,2);
$day=0+substr($date,8,2);
$t=0;
$d=date("d");
$m=date("m");
$y=date("Y");
$age=$y-$year;

if ($m<$month) $t=-1;
else if ($m==$month) if ($d<$day) $t=-1;

return ($age+$t);
}

this funktion has got a little bug:
On Line 12 and 13...
Bugfix:
12 if ($month<$m) $t=-1;
13 else if ($m==$month AND $day<$d) $t=-1;
you NOSPAM don't need 2 know ETC
25-Mar-2003 01:47
EXCEL DATES TO UNIX TIMESTAMPS
----------------------------

I get a lot of dates which are sent to me in those dastardly Excel spreadsheet things. For example, the date 15 April 1976, Excel stores as 27865.

I convert these to UNIX timestamps using the little function below.

<?
function xl2timestamp($xl_date)
{
$timestamp = ($xl - 25569) * 86400;
return $timestamp;
}
?>
garyc at earthling dot net
19-Mar-2003 02:38
I needed to calculate the week number from a given date and vice versa, where the week starts with a Monday and the first week of a year may begin the year before, if the year begins in the middle of the week (Tue-Sun). This is the way weekly magazines calculate their issue numbers.

Here are two functions that do exactly that:

Hope somebody finds this useful.

Gary

/*  w e e k n u m b e r  -------------------------------------- //
weeknumber returns a week number from a given date (>1970, <2030)
Wed, 2003-01-01 is in week 1
Mon, 2003-01-06 is in week 2
Wed, 2003-12-31 is in week 53, next years first week
Be careful, there are years with 53 weeks.
// ------------------------------------------------------------ */

function weeknumber ($y, $m, $d) {
   $wn = strftime("%W",mktime(0,0,0,$m,$d,$y));
   $wn += 0; # wn might be a string value
   $firstdayofyear = getdate(mktime(0,0,0,1,1,$y));
   if ($firstdayofyear["wday"] != 1)    # if 1/1 is not a Monday, add 1
       $wn += 1;
   return ($wn);
}    # function weeknumber

/*  d a t e f r o m w e e k  ---------------------------------- //
From a weeknumber, calculates the corresponding date
Input: Year, weeknumber and day offset
Output: Exact date in an associative (named) array
2003, 12, 0: 2003-03-17 (a Monday)
1995,  53, 2: 1995-12-xx
...
// ------------------------------------------------------------ */

function datefromweek ($y, $w, $o) {

   $days = ($w - 1) * 7 + $o;

   $firstdayofyear = getdate(mktime(0,0,0,1,1,$y));
   if ($firstdayofyear["wday"] == 0) $firstdayofyear["wday"] += 7;
# in getdate, Sunday is 0 instead of 7
   $firstmonday = getdate(mktime(0,0,0,1,1-$firstdayofyear["wday"]+1,$y));
   $calcdate = getdate(mktime(0,0,0,$firstmonday["mon"], $firstmonday["mday"]+$days,$firstmonday["year"]));

   $date["year"] = $calcdate["year"];
   $date["month"] = $calcdate["mon"];
   $date["day"] = $calcdate["mday"];

   return ($date);

}    # function datefromweek
balin
16-Feb-2003 07:53
this function count days between $start and $end dates in mysql format (yyyy-mm-dd)
if one of paramters is 0000-00-00 will return 0
$start date must be less then $end
<?
//For Count Days
function count_days($start, $end)
{
   if( $start != '0000-00-00' and $end != '0000-00-00' )
   {
       $timestamp_start = strtotime($start);
       $timestamp_end = strtotime($end);
       if( $timestamp_start >= $timestamp_end ) return 0;
       $start_year = date("Y",$timestamp_start);
       $end_year = date("Y", $timestamp_end);
       $num_days_start = date("z",strtotime($start));
       $num_days_end = date("z", strtotime($end));
       $num_d