I'm trying to generate a list of consecutive date periods by using strtotime to add 13 days to the first date like this:
$start = strtotime(date('2020-06-01'));
for($x = 1; $x<=10; $x++) // increment $x until 10
{
$period = $start - ($x * 1209600); // 1209600 is equivalent to 14 days. Multiply by $x
$period_end = date('Y-m-d', strtotime(date('Y-m-d', $period). ' + 13 days'));
echo date('Y-m-d', $period) . " - " . $period_end ."<br>";
}
The output looks like this:
2020-05-18 - 20-05-31
2020-05-04 - 20-05-17
2020-04-20 - 20-05-03
2020-04-06 - 20-04-19
2020-03-23 - 20-04-05
2020-03-09 - 20-03-22
2020-02-23 - 20-03-07
2020-02-09 - 20-02-22
2020-01-26 - 20-02-08
2020-01-12 - 20-01-25
Everything works as expected until it hits the '2020-02-23 - 20-03-07' range. It should report '2020-02-24 - 2020-03-08' Why the shift by 1 day? Is this a bug in PHP strtotime in relation to a leap year?
Edit: This was not a leap year issue. It turned out to be a daylight savings time issue in my timezone. When DST occurred on 3/8 the time in seconds from epoch changed by an hour. This shifted my date to 1 hour earlier which ends up being a previous day.
2020-06-01 12:00:00
to avoid problems with things like daylight saving.DateTime()~,
DateInterval(), and
DatePeriod()` when working with dates like this.strtotime()
was not designed to handle these kinds of things.