I'm using the following SQL query in postgres:
SELECT
date_trunc('month', s.thedate),
r.rank,
COUNT(r.rank)
FROM
serps s
LEFT JOIN ranks r ON r.serpid = s.serpid
GROUP BY
date_trunc('month', s.thedate), s.thedate, r.rank
ORDER BY
s.thedate ASC;
when I run that query directly against the database, I get the data all the data I need and the dates seem to be correct (formatted in Y-m-d g:i:s
).
However, when I run it with PHP, Postgres instead of the date returns the timestamp.
Therefore, when I use that timestamp in PHP date
, the whole date is incorrect.
For instance:
The first row Postgres displays it as:
"2013-08-01 00:00:00, 36, 1"
but PHP receives:
"1375315200000, 36, 1"
When I try to do:
echo date("Y-m-d", 1375315200000);
The output is:
45552-01-02
instead of
2013-08-01
At first I thought it was a padding issue, perhaps? I dropped the last three zeros in the timestamp so:
echo date("Y-m-d", 1375315200);
and that returns:
2013-07-31
My questions are:
1) Is it only a coincidence that after dropping three zeros, the timestamp represent a day before the actual date stored in the database?
2) Why Postgres interprets the timestamp correctly; whereas php doesn't? According to the documentation Postgres timestamp should be in the unix timestamp format.
TimeZone
set toUTC
on the server? Does your server timezone change? Are the fields in questiontimestamp
ortimestamp with time zone
type?2013-08-01 00:00:00
, that is what php receives. If you think that php receives1375315200000
, please demonstrate it with some code, ideally a reproducible test case.timestamp
in this context is a datatype. The values are not a number of milliseconds since 1970. See postgresql.org/docs/current/static/datatype-datetime.html . Plus the output of date_trunc may be of time timestamp or timestamptz depending on the type ofthedate
field.