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I know there is similar post about how to get the last Thursday in PHP but I don't want to have the last Thursday compare to the current date but the last Thursday compare to a given date.

For example I have a date dd/mm/yyyy and I want the Thursday before this date. The input is a String ( the format of the string yymmdd) that I want to parse to get the Thursday before this date.

Thanks for your help

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  • 020512 means 12 May 2002 , I want to parse this string to get the Thursday before and return the date of the Thursday before in the same format (yymmdd)
    – Othman
    Jul 27, 2011 at 15:06
  • @Shef that is usually handled in php.ini and will resolve itself. Jul 27, 2011 at 15:06
  • @Oto What about if the date passed to the function happens to be a Thursday; should the function return the same date or the date a week prior? Jul 27, 2011 at 15:08
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    @Shef the fact that it's a string is of no consequence; choosing a century from a 2-digit year is a configuration issue and is thus handled in php.ini. Jul 27, 2011 at 15:09
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    @Shef you do know that you can tell PHP what format the string is in for date parsing purposes, yes? Jul 27, 2011 at 15:10

2 Answers 2

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//Assumes it's strtotime parsable, you may need to insert
//  slashes with your given format eg (and use 4 digit years)
$given=strtotime($dtstring);

//It's just that easy ;)
$thuBefore=strtotime("last thursday",$given);

Note that this will always get last thursday, meaning if the given date is a Thursday, it'll report 7 days earlier (but if the date's a Friday it'll only report one day earlier).

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  • +1 ...but beware of the way strtotime functions in different versions of PHP. Be sure to check the Changelog for issues relating to relative dates, and test carefully if using more than one version of PHP.
    – Mike
    Jul 27, 2011 at 15:18
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$day = date('w', $yourTime);
$time = $yourTime - ($day > 4 ? ($day - 4) : ($day + 7 - 4)) * 3600 * 24;

Where both $yourTime and $time are Unix-timestamps.

Edit: @Rudu's solution is way more simple, you should stick with that one :)!

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  • @TvE Thanks! I always used to do it the manual way (although by attempting to avoid branches with MOD/%) until I discovered there's some very handy built in ability. I wonder how the two approaches compare on performance?
    – Rudu
    Jul 27, 2011 at 15:33
  • I thought about using MOD, because it looks much nicer, but I didn't really figure out how to do that. MOD basically is x - (floor(x) / y) * y, but I can't really figure out how to place that in this 'formula'. But I'm pretty sure MOD does have a better performance, though the difference won't be that significant :).
    – cutsoy
    Jul 27, 2011 at 16:54
  • Oh, I didn't know you meant comparing MOD vs ()-braces or MOD/braces vs strtotime. I'm pretty sure plain math is faster than strtotime. I've been told that strtotime creates an internal Date-object that performs all calculations, so working with integers is probably a lot faster :)! Besides that, it also has to parse your 'command'-string ("last thursday"), which also does need some more time than just integers. However, it's much easier to understand and read for (other) developers than such an formula, so ... :)!
    – cutsoy
    Jul 27, 2011 at 16:57

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