1

In the user interface, i have a text field to enter date in dd/mm/yyyy format and there is another textbox for time in hh:mm format and another dropdown box to specify am or pm. All these three fields will let the user to enter the date,time and am/pm manually. I prefered to use this primitive method as per the requirement of the project.

Now i want all these values to be added in mysql in timestamp format to make it easier to fetch and manipulate. Please suggest me how can i achieve this.

<?
$date = '21'.'/'.'11'.'/'.'2011';
$time = '12'.':'.'00';
$ampm = "am";
$dt = DateTime::createFromFormat(
    'd/m/Y h:i a',
 sprintf('%s %s %s', $date, $time, $ampm),
   new DateTimeZone('Country/Region'));



$mysqlDateString = $dt->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');


?>

3 Answers 3

2

Use mktime in conjunction with the correct format to date by sending your user input to explode, like so:

$date = '22/11/2011'; $date_pieces = explode( '/', $date);
$time = '08:35'; $time_pieces = explode( ':', $time);
$am_pm = 'PM';

$mysql_timestamp = date( 'Y-m-d H:i:s', mktime( 
    $time_pieces[0] + ( $am_pm == 'AM' ? -12 : 12), // Hour - Convert AM/PM to 24-hr format
    $time_pieces[1], // Minute
    0, // Second
    $date_pieces[1], // Month
    $date_pieces[0], // Day
    $date_pieces[2])); // year

Now $mysql_timestamp is a valid entry for a datetime column.

If you need a UNIX timestamp, just remove the call to date, like so:

$unix_timestamp = mktime( 
    $time_pieces[0] + ( $am_pm == 'AM' ? -12 : 12), // Hour - Convert AM/PM to 24-hr format
    $time_pieces[1], // Minute
    0, // Second
    $date_pieces[1], // Month
    $date_pieces[0], // Day
    $date_pieces[2]);

Demo

Edit: As per Phil's comments below, be sure to set a correct timezone with date_default_timezone_set.

3
  • Should probably set a timezone using date_default_timezone_set()
    – Phil
    Nov 22, 2011 at 5:50
  • 1
    Doesn't seem to make a difference on my tests - Can you post an example where the output is different when different timezones are inputted?
    – nickb
    Nov 22, 2011 at 6:03
  • The unix timestamp will be different for different timezones. For example, using your date and Australia/Melbourne, I get 1321954500. For Australia/Perth I get 1321965300
    – Phil
    Nov 22, 2011 at 6:16
2

Use DateTime::createFromFormat().

Assuming the form fields have been POSTed, roughly validated and collected into variables...

// assume $date, $time, $ampm

$dt = DateTime::createFromFormat(
    'd/m/Y h:i a',
    sprintf('%s %s %s', $date, $time, $ampm),
    new DateTimeZone('Country/Region'));

$unixTimestamp = $dt->getTimestamp();

$mysqlDateString = $dt->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');

If you're storing the date/time as a MySQL date/time string, you should probably store the timezone as well or else it will be impossible to retrieve accurate data.

7
  • @nickb PHP 5.3.0 released on Jun 30, 2009. I'd say it's been long enough to stop using that disclaimer
    – Phil
    Nov 22, 2011 at 5:49
  • 1
    @Phil that is to return unixTimestamp. But i would like to add it as normal mysql timestamp. Is it posible using objects as u did above ? nickb's solution worked..!
    – Bala
    Nov 22, 2011 at 5:55
  • @Bala.C I've added a MySQL date string version to the answer
    – Phil
    Nov 22, 2011 at 5:56
  • @Phil You'd think, but then again we still have people using XP / IE6 :)
    – nickb
    Nov 22, 2011 at 6:00
  • I tried your solution phil..but it throws an error..posibly, i got it wrong..! I have posted the code above.
    – Bala
    Nov 22, 2011 at 6:04
1

There is loads of information over at MySQL about time conversions. In your case I think str_to_date would work.

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