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strtotime> <strftime
[edit] Last updated: Fri, 23 Mar 2012

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strptime

(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0)

strptime strftime() işleviyle üretilen zaman ve tarihleri çözümler

Açıklama

array strptime ( string $tarih , string $biçim )

strptime() işlevi çözümlenmiş tarih değiştirgesini bir diziyle döndürür. Hata durumlarındaysa FALSE değeriyle döner.

Ay, gün isimleri ve yerel ayarlarıyla ilgili dile bağımlı diğer dizgeler (LC_TIME), setlocale() işleviyle ayarlanır.

Değiştirgeler

tarih

Çözümlenen dizge (ör. strftime() işlevinden dönen değer)

biçim

tarih değiştirgesinde kullanılan biçim (ör. strftime() işlevinde kullanılanla aynı).

Biçimlendirme seçenekleri hakkında daha fazla bilgi için strftime() sayfasını okuyun.

Dönen Değerler

Dizi döndürür. Hata durumlarında FALSE değeriyle döner.

Diziyle dönen değerler
Değiştirge Açıklama
"tm_sec" Saniye (0-61)
"tm_min" Dakika (0-59)
"tm_hour" Saat (0-23)
"tm_mday" Gün (1-31)
"tm_mon" Ay (0-11)
"tm_year" 1900'den itibaren yıllar
"tm_wday" Pazar'dan itibaren hafta günleri (0-6)
"tm_yday" Ocak 1'den itibaren günler (0-365)
"unparsed" tarih değiştirgesinin bilinmeyen biçim değiştirgesi kullanımından dönen değer

Örnekler

Örnek 1 - strptime() örneği

<?php
$biçim 
'%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S';
$strf strftime($biçim);

echo 
"$strf\n";

print_r(strptime($strf$biçim));
?>

Yukarıdaki örnek şuna benzer bir çıktı üretir:

03/10/2004 15:54:19

Array
(
    [tm_sec] => 19
    [tm_min] => 54
    [tm_hour] => 15
    [tm_mday] => 3
    [tm_mon] => 9
    [tm_year] => 104
    [tm_wday] => 0
    [tm_yday] => 276
    [unparsed] =>
)

Notlar

Bilginize: Bu işlev Windows sistemlerinde çalışmaz.

Bilginize:

"tm_sec" "artık saniyeleri" de içerir (yılda 2 saniyeye kadar). Artık saniyeler hakkında bilgi edinmek için » Wikipedia artık saniyeler makalesine bakınız.

Ayrıca Bakınız

  • strftime() - Format a local time/date according to locale settings



strtotime> <strftime
[edit] Last updated: Fri, 23 Mar 2012
 
add a note add a note User Contributed Notes strptime
131 21-Apr-2011 12:17
Another portage for windows (from ex/yks toolkit)
<?php
//  public static
function strptime($date, $format) {
   
$masks = array(
     
'%d' => '(?P<d>[0-9]{2})',
     
'%m' => '(?P<m>[0-9]{2})',
     
'%Y' => '(?P<Y>[0-9]{4})',
     
'%H' => '(?P<H>[0-9]{2})',
     
'%M' => '(?P<M>[0-9]{2})',
     
'%S' => '(?P<S>[0-9]{2})',
    
// usw..
   
);

   
$rexep = "#".strtr(preg_quote($format), $masks)."#";
    if(!
preg_match($rexep, $date, $out))
      return
false;

   
$ret = array(
     
"tm_sec"  => (int) $out['S'],
     
"tm_min"  => (int) $out['M'],
     
"tm_hour" => (int) $out['H'],
     
"tm_mday" => (int) $out['d'],
     
"tm_mon"  => $out['m']?$out['m']-1:0,
     
"tm_year" => $out['Y'] > 1900 ? $out['Y'] - 1900 : 0,
    );
    return
$ret;
  }
?>
Gravis 03-Apr-2009 05:33
If you are just looking to switch an existing time format into a mysql compatible format(like YYYYMMDDHHMMSS.uuuuuu) you should use STR_TO_DATE.
see: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/date-and-time-functions.html

However, if you have an old version of mysql (before 4.1), you may want to consider using a regex.  The example below doesnt have seconds because they arent used often if you are ripping data from a web page.  You will probably have to customize this to your needs.

==code== // for 24 hour times
<?php
  $before
= "12/15/2005 15:47";
 
$after = preg_replace("/([0-9]{2})\/([0-9]{2})\/([0-9]{4}) ([0-9]{2}):([0-9]{2})/", "$3$1$2$4$5", $before)."00.000000";

  echo
"$before\n$after\n";
?>

==output==
  12/15/2005 15:47
  20051215154700.000000

.

If you are unlucky, you will need to be converting to the 24 hour format as well.
==code== // for 12 hour AM/PM times
<?php
  $before
= "12/15/2005 03:47PM";
// note: you can use an anonymous function instead IF you have php 5
 
function convert_time($m) { if($m[6]=="PM") { $m[4]+=12; } return $m[3].$m[1].$m[2].$m[4].$m[5]."00.000000"; }
 
$after = preg_replace_callback("/([0-9]{2})\/([0-9]{2})\/([0-9]{4}) ([0-9]{2}):([0-9]{2})(AM|PM)/", "convert_time", $before);

  echo
"$before\n$after\n";
?>

==output==
  12/15/2005 03:47PM
  20051215154700.000000
Quietust 27-Feb-2009 08:38
On some systems, particularly those of BSD lineage (such as FreeBSD and MacOS X), the tm_wday and tm_yday fields are only initialized if requested explicitly (that is, if the %a/%A/%u/%w and %j formats are specified), while others such as Linux and Solaris will calculate them automatically.
Altar 2010 24-Oct-2008 01:45
If you want to parse a date or a /time in windows env, i re-write strptime function for windows.

I use the same param and i return the same think that the original one.
I use sscanf to parde the string.
Only some format can be parsed (%S, %M, %H, %d, %m, %Y)

See this page (because the function is too big for this notes)
http://sauron.lionel.free.fr/?page=php_lib_strptime

preview :
<?php
/**
 * Parse a time/date generated with strftime().
 *
 * This function is the same as the original one defined by PHP (Linux/Unix only),
 *  but now you can use it on Windows too.
 *  Limitation : Only this format can be parsed %S, %M, %H, %d, %m, %Y
 *
 * @author Lionel SAURON
 * @version 1.0
 * @public
 *
 * @param $sDate(string)    The string to parse (e.g. returned from strftime()).
 * @param $sFormat(string)  The format used in date  (e.g. the same as used in strftime()).
 * @return (array)          Returns an array with the <code>$sDate</code> parsed, or <code>false</code> on error.
 */
if(function_exists("strptime") == false)
{
    function
strptime($sDate, $sFormat)
    {
       
$aResult = array
        (
           
'tm_sec'   => 0,
           
'tm_min'   => 0,
           
'tm_hour'  => 0,
           
'tm_mday'  => 1,
           
'tm_mon'   => 0,
           
'tm_year'  => 0,
           
'tm_wday'  => 0,
           
'tm_yday'  => 0,
           
'unparsed' => $sDate,
        );
       
        while(
$sFormat != "")
        {
           
// ===== Search a %x element, Check the static string before the %x =====
           
$nIdxFound = strpos($sFormat, '%');
            if(
$nIdxFound === false)
            {
               
               
// There is no more format. Check the last static string.
               
$aResult['unparsed'] = ($sFormat == $sDate) ? "" : $sDate;
                break;
            }
       
        .....
        .....
        .....
        .....
       
       
// ===== Create the other value of the result array =====
       
$nParsedDateTimestamp = mktime($aResult['tm_hour'], $aResult['tm_min'], $aResult['tm_sec'],
                               
$aResult['tm_mon'] + 1, $aResult['tm_mday'], $aResult['tm_year'] + 1900);
       
       
// Before PHP 5.1 return -1 when error
       
if(($nParsedDateTimestamp === false)
        ||(
$nParsedDateTimestamp === -1)) return false;
       
       
$aResult['tm_wday'] = (int) strftime("%w", $nParsedDateTimestamp); // Days since Sunday (0-6)
       
$aResult['tm_yday'] = (strftime("%j", $nParsedDateTimestamp) - 1); // Days since January 1 (0-365)

       
return $aResult;
    }
// END of function
   
} // END if(function_exists("strptime") == false)
?>
firefox3107 at gmail dot com 23-Mar-2008 06:44
For Windows user! It's rather the same as strptime!
It uses the previous function: but call strToTime($date, $format) to strToDate($date, $format) because this name is forgiven!

<?php
function strToDateTime($date, $format) {
    if(!(
$date = strToDate($date, $format))) return;
   
$dateTime = array('sec' => 0, 'min' => 0, 'hour' => 0, 'day' => 0, 'mon' => 0, 'year' => 0, 'timestamp' => 0);
    foreach(
$date as $key => $val) {
        switch(
$key) {
            case
'd':
            case
'j': $dateTime['day'] = intval($val); break;
            case
'D': $dateTime['day'] = intval(date('j', $val)); break;
           
            case
'm':
            case
'n': $dateTime['mon'] = intval($val); break;
            case
'M': $dateTime['mon'] = intval(date('n', $val)); break;
           
            case
'Y': $dateTime['year'] = intval($val); break;
            case
'y': $dateTime['year'] = intval($val)+2000; break;
           
            case
'G':
            case
'g':
            case
'H':
            case
'h': $dateTime['hour'] = intval($val); break;
           
            case
'i': $dateTime['min'] = intval($val); break;
           
            case
's': $dateTime['sec'] = intval($val); break;
        }
    }
   
$dateTime['timestamp'] = mktime($dateTime['hour'], $dateTime['min'], $dateTime['sec'], $dateTime['mon'], $dateTime['day'], $dateTime['year']);
    return
$dateTime;
}
?>
P. 30-Jan-2008 04:19
If strptime() fails to match all of the format string and therefore an error occurred the function returns NULL.
chad 0x40 herballure 0x2e com 15-Jun-2007 07:00
The result of strptime() is not affected by the current timezone setting, even though strftime() is. Tested in PHP 5.1.6.
svenr at selfhtml dot org 23-Nov-2006 01:44
If you need strptime but are restricted to a php version which does not support it (windows or before PHP 5), note that MySQL since Version 4.1.1 offers (almost?) the same functionality with the STR_TO_DATE function.

See http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/4.1/en/date-and-time-functions.html
DT <pwadas at gazeta dot pl> 10-Aug-2006 12:55
<?php
//This turns non-standard but often used "datetime" string
//like '20060810084251' into nice formatted date
//'Thursday, 10 August 2006 08:42:51 CEST'
//note, that strptime returns day of year counting from 0, so
//you need to put 1 as month number to get appropriate
//month for the daycount. for 2006 strptime for unknown
//reason returns 106, so I simply add 1900

$informat = '%Y%m%d%H%M%S';
$outformat '%A, %d %B %Y %T %Z';
$ftime = strptime("20060810084251",$informat);
$unxTimestamp = mktime(
                   
$ftime['tm_hour'],
                   
$ftime['tm_min'],
                   
$ftime['tm_sec'],
                   
1 ,
                   
$ftime['tm_yday'] + 1,
                  
$ftime['tm_year'] + 1900
                
);
//setlocale(LC_TIME,'pl_PL');
echo strftime($outformat , $unxTimestamp );
?>
jojyjob at gmail dot com 13-May-2006 12:18
/***Finding the days of a week ***/

<?php

$out
= pre(); 
$outpre=nextweek();
$td=date("Y-m-d");
$result = array_reverse($outpre);
//print_r($result);
array_push($result,$td);
$newarray = array_merge($result,$out);

  foreach(
$newarray as $date1){
    echo
$date1;
    echo
"<br>";
 }

//print_r($out);
//print_r($newarray);

function pre() 
{
$monP=0;
$tueP=1;
$wedP=2;
$thuP=3;
$friP=4;
$satP=5;
$sunP=6;
 
$td=date("Y-m-d");  
//echo $td;
$tdname=date("l"); 
  switch(
$tdname)
  {
   case
"Monday":
      
$rep=$monP;
       break;
   case
"Tuesday":
      
$rep=$tueP;
       break;
   case
"Wednesday":
      
$rep=$wedP;
       break;
   case
"Thursday":
      
$rep=$thuP;
       break;
   case
"Friday":
      
$rep=$friP;
       break;
   case
"Saturday":
      
$rep=$satP;      
       break;
   case
"Sunday":
      
$rep=$sunP;      
       break;      
   default:
       echo
"Sorry";      
  }

 
//echo $tdname."<br>";  
//echo $rep;
$datstart =$td/* the starting date */
//$rep = 12;  /* number of future dates to display */
$nod = 1/* number of days in the future to increment the date */
$nom = 0/* number of months in the future to increment the date */
$noy = 0/* number of years in the future to increment the date */
$precon=future_date($datstart,$rep,$nod,$nom,$noy);
return
$precon;
}
function
future_date($datstart,$rep,$nod,$nom,$noy) {
 
$pre = array();
  while (
$rep >= 1) {
   
$datyy=substr($datstart,0,4);
   
$datmm=substr($datstart,5,2);
   
$datdd=substr($datstart,8,2);
   
$fda=$datdd - $nod;
   
$fmo=$datmm - $nom;
   
$fyr=$datyy -$noy;
   
$dat1=date("Y-m-d", mktime(0,0,0,$fmo,$fda,$fyr))."<BR>";
   
array_push($pre,$dat1);
   
//echo $dat1;
   
$datstart=$dat1;
   
$rep--;
  }
  return
$pre;
}

function
nextweek()
{
$monN=6;
$tueN=5;
$wedN=4;
$thuN=3;
$friN=2;
$satN=1;
$sunN=0;

$td=date("Y-m-d");  
$tdname=date("l"); 
  switch(
$tdname)
  {
   case
"Monday":
      
$rep=$monN;
       break;
   case
"Tuesday":
      
$rep=$tueN;
       break;
   case
"Wednesday":
      
$rep=$wedN;
       break;
   case
"Thursday":
      
$rep=$thuN;
       break;
   case
"Friday":
      
$rep=$friN;
       break;
   case
"Saturday":
      
$rep=$satN;      
       break;
   case
"Sunday":
      
$rep=$sunN;      
       break;      
   default:
       echo
"Sorry";      
  }

 
//echo $tdname."<br>";  
//echo $rep;
$datstart =$td/* the starting date */
//$rep = 12;  /* number of future dates to display */
$nod = 1/* number of days in the future to increment the date */
$nom = 0/* number of months in the future to increment the date */
$noy = 0/* number of years in the future to increment the date */

$con = future_date1($datstart,$rep,$nod,$nom,$noy);
return
$con;
}

function
future_date1($datstart,$rep,$nod,$nom,$noy) {
 
$pre = array();
  while (
$rep >= 1) {
   
$datyy=substr($datstart,0,4);
   
$datmm=substr($datstart,5,2);
   
$datdd=substr($datstart,8,2);
   
$fda=$datdd + $nod;
   
$fmo=$datmm + $nom;
   
$fyr=$datyy + $noy;
   
$dat1=date("Y-m-d", mktime(0,0,0,$fmo,$fda,$fyr))."<BR>";
   
array_push($pre,$dat1);
   
//echo $dat1;
   
$datstart=$dat1;
   
$rep--;
  }
  return
$pre;
}

?>
Malte Starostik 27-Mar-2006 10:45
It says "Parse a time/date generated with strftime()" but that's not entirely correct -- While strptime("2006131", "%Y%W%u") works as expected, strptime("2006131", "%G%V%u") returns false instead of reversing the equivalent - and unambiguous - strftime() usage.  I suspect that's because glibc doesn't support that.  Anyway, this docu page fails to mention that apparently not all format components supported by strftime() can be used with strptime().

 
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