This question already has answers here:
Convert one date format into another in PHP
(17 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
Now I'm having a date like this, April/2019. I wanted to convert it into 04/2019 in php. How to resolve this?
date('m/Y', strtotime($_POST`['card_form_plan_start_date']))
What I Wanted - 04/2019
Actual Result - 01/1970
strtotime won't recognise April/2019 as a date. Instead, you can use date_create_from_format with the F/Y format, then reformat the output as m/Y:
echo date_create_from_format('F/Y', 'April/2019')->format('m/Y');
Output
04/2019
Demo on 3v4l.org
You need to replace / with -
date('m/Y', strtotime(str_replace('/','-',$_POST`['card_form_plan_start_date'])))
Related
This question already has answers here:
Convert one date format into another in PHP
(17 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
I am currently outputting a timestamp from my database (code below) but it's in the wrong format.
<p>{$row->last_updated}</p>
It is currently outputting 2018-10-23 13:36:40
The time is ok but the date isn't. This is what I want:
23-10-2018 13:36:40
What do I need to do with this code in order to display it like that?
You can use date()
<p><?php echo date('d-m-Y H:i:s',strtotime($row->last_updated));?></p>
You can change date format using PHP date function like this :
date('d-m-Y H:i:s', strtotime($row->last_updated))
This question already has answers here:
Converting to date in PHP from yyyymmdd format
(5 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
I have a date in my sql with the following format:
20150426
I want to convert it to format 26/05/2015 into a variable.
Which is the best way to do it?
Can I do it with explode?
Do in this manner----
<?php
$nextBse = date('d/m/Y',strtotime(20150426));
echo $nextBse;
?>
Output:-- 26/04/2015
Please follow this method
edit:
d means "day"
m means "month"
Y means "year"
so the format of date will be d/m/Y
and we have a date to convert a new format but our data is not full data
like day/month/year/hour/minute/second
there are day,month,year
and we need to convert full date
so we use strtotime($ourdate);
$dt="20150426";
echo date('d/m/Y',strtotime($dt));
This question already has answers here:
Convert one date format into another in PHP
(17 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
Well, I am working with twitch's API currently and I want to echo the time that the current stream started at. Currently the following is output: 2015-04-11T07:45:20Z seconds so I am wondering how I would convert this into a readable time. i.e. 07:45:20.
DateTime::createFromFormat() allows you to read in non-standard date input and turn it into a DateTime object that you can then use to format your output however you like:
$date = DateTime::createFromFormat('Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z *', '2015-04-11T07:45:20Z seconds');
echo $date->format('H:i:s'); // 07:45:20
Demo
This question already has answers here:
Closed 10 years ago.
Possible Duplicate:
Covert time format in php
I am getting a start_time field value from mysql data base as 2012-08-14 21:30:00
and i want to convert it in php format like 2012-08-14T09:30 is there any method to do
this in php ?
use strtotime()
$date = strtotime('2012-08-14 21:30:00');
echo date('Y-m-d\Th:i',$date);
see this example.for the required date & time format:
$date=date("Y-m-d H:i:s");//get the current date
$d=strtotime($date);//convert in strtotime
echo $final_date=date("Y-m-d\Th:i:s",$d);//in the first argument of date ,put the format whatever you want,but be sure to convert it in strtotime first.
This question already has answers here:
Convert one date format into another in PHP
(17 answers)
Closed 2 years ago.
I am tring to make the google news sitemap by php script from mysql.(all the date save as timestamp in +08:00)
But how to converting date to YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ssTZD?
For example 1338048000 => 2012-05-26T09:00:00+08:00
echo date("Y-m-d T h:i:s",'1338048000').'+08:00';//2012-05-26 PDT 09:00:00+08:00
Not the result what I need. And how to? Thanks.
How about this?
echo date("c",'1338048000');
I'd say:
gmdate('Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z', '1338048000');
The T means something, and needs to be escaped. Or, since PHP5, the ISO8601 date format is natively supported with the c character.
Additionally, using gmdate instead of date removes the need to worry about timezones.
echo date("c", "1338048000").'+08:00';