Skip to Content
Learning PHP 5
book

Learning PHP 5

by David Sklar
June 2004
Beginner
368 pages
11h 1m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Learning PHP 5

Chapter 9. Handling Dates and Times

Dates and times are all over the place in a web application. In a shopping cart, you need to handle shipping dates of products. In a forum, you need to keep track of when messages are posted. In all sorts of applications, you need to keep track of the last time a user logged in so that you can tell them things such as “fifteen new messages were posted since you last logged in.”

Handling dates and times properly in your programs is more complicated than handing strings or numbers. A date or a time is not a single value but a collection of values—month, day, and year, for example, or hour, minute, and second. Because of this, doing math with them can be tricky. Instead of just adding or subtracting entire dates and times, you have to consider their component parts and what the allowable values for each part are. Hours go up to 12 (or 24), minutes and seconds go up to 59, and not all months have the same number of days.

A programming convention that simplifies date and time calculation is to treat a particular time and date as a single value: the number of seconds that have elapsed since midnight on January 1, 1970. This value is called an epoch timestamp. The choice of January 1, 1970 is mostly arbitrary. But, as is the way with conventions, since lots of other people are doing it, you’ve got to do it, too. Fortunately, PHP provides plenty of functions for you to deal with epoch timestamps.

In this book, the phrase time parts (or date parts or ...

Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.

Read now

Unlock full access

More than 5,000 organizations count on O’Reilly

AirBnbBlueOriginElectronic ArtsHomeDepotNasdaqRakutenTata Consultancy Services

QuotationMarkO’Reilly covers everything we've got, with content to help us build a world-class technology community, upgrade the capabilities and competencies of our teams, and improve overall team performance as well as their engagement.
Julian F.
Head of Cybersecurity
QuotationMarkI wanted to learn C and C++, but it didn't click for me until I picked up an O'Reilly book. When I went on the O’Reilly platform, I was astonished to find all the books there, plus live events and sandboxes so you could play around with the technology.
Addison B.
Field Engineer
QuotationMarkI’ve been on the O’Reilly platform for more than eight years. I use a couple of learning platforms, but I'm on O'Reilly more than anybody else. When you're there, you start learning. I'm never disappointed.
Amir M.
Data Platform Tech Lead
QuotationMarkI'm always learning. So when I got on to O'Reilly, I was like a kid in a candy store. There are playlists. There are answers. There's on-demand training. It's worth its weight in gold, in terms of what it allows me to do.
Mark W.
Embedded Software Engineer

You might also like

Learning PHP

Learning PHP

David Sklar
PHP 5 Power Programming

PHP 5 Power Programming

Andi Gutmans, Stig Sæther Bakken, Derick Rethans

Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0596005601Errata Page