How to convert human-friendly date to milliseconds since the unix epoch?
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dupe stackoverflow.com/questions/113829/date-to-timestamp-php– SilentGhostOct 7, 2009 at 16:00
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4If you take into account the milliseconds issue it is not a dupe– drAlberTOct 7, 2009 at 16:19
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2It depends, to know that multiply seconds by 1k is not equal to have a milliseconds precision? see my answer :)– drAlberTOct 7, 2009 at 16:51
3 Answers
strtotime($human_readable_date) * 1000
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5
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12Note that you have milliseconds only as a fake, as your real precision is only of 1k milliseconds, aka second :) ... This way you don't have milliseconds, but seconds expressed as number of milliseconds– drAlberTOct 7, 2009 at 16:11
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1
Pay attention:
strtotime() * 1000
is ok to have seconds expressed as milliseconds!
The right answer is that it is not possible to have a millisecond precision on date/time functions in PHP. The precision of Unix Epoc based functions is only of 1k milliseconds, aka second :)
Using the suggested answers you don't have milliseconds, but seconds expressed as number of milliseconds.
If you are aware of this, and you don't really need a millisecond precision then the answers given are ok, but the question was wrong :)
You're looking for strtotime
.
Sample Usage:
$myvar = strtotime("7 October 2009");
That gives you seconds since the Unix epoch, so you want:
$myvar = strtotime("7 October 2009") * 1000;
Watch out for the fact that strtotime
"guesses" what you mean (how should it interpret "12-08-2009"? probably as 8th December, but it might equally validly - and being a Brit, thoroughly sensibly - guess 12th August). If you know the format in advance, use strptime
.
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This is a terrific answer as it also goes into detail on the date formatting. +1– user1239087Sep 7, 2019 at 18:37