1

I am amazed. I forgot to include strtotime but realized that it works in any case. Why does this work?

    if($_POST['active_to'] == ''  || $_POST['active_to'] >= '2038-01-19'){
        $postproduct->active_to = '2025-07-31';
    }else{
        $postproduct->active_to = $_POST['active_to'];
    }
2
  • It compares the strings, anything abnormal? it works because your time format is Y-m-d ...
    – agou
    Sep 11, 2012 at 7:23
  • Use DateTime if you want to do easy comparisons.
    – dan-lee
    Sep 11, 2012 at 7:27

5 Answers 5

5

Because YYYY-MM-DD format happens to sort in the same order when using string comparison.

If you were using, say, DD-MM-YYYY format, it wouldn't have worked. Similarly, if you were using YYYY-M-D format (where a leading zero isn't required), it also wouldn't work (because "2010-5-10" comes after "2010-12-10" in string ordering).

"2010-10-05" is greater than "2000-10-05" not because 2010 > 2000, but because "20" = "20" and "1" > "0". The first character that differs between the two strings happens to sort in the right order.

1
  • I got it soon enough and promptly forgot about this post but astounded by the helpful answers. Thank you very much.
    – Wil
    Nov 20, 2012 at 7:56
2

Because the string will be compared lexically character by character.

  • is 2 larger than 2?
  • if no, is 0 larger than 0?
  • if no, ...
0
0

You can directly compare the dates only for greater then less then or equal as it is a string.

As long as you have date in YYYY-MM-DD format only. Because YYYY-MM-DD will always change in increment format.

Please keep in mind about the format. Otherwise you have to use strtotime function.

0

You compare strings. In this operation, strings are converted to the numbers. If you have format Y-m-d, it works well because first is year which is the biggest value (Y*365 days) then month, and then days.

Result can be invalid in some cases because of not equal values of days in month, etc.

Ref: http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php#language.operators.comparison.types

-1

IT works because you are doing a string comparison which will work in an or condition, so long as that condition is true.

0

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