26

I am calling an API from where I am getting date /Date(1365004652303-0500)/, I don't understand what format this is. How is this date format called? I was not sure what to google for such type of format.

Can anyone help me out in getting this date in Y-m-d H:i:s format?

The API I am calling is on .NET server. And when I call it using PHP's file_get_contents and json_decode it gives me the following Date format for created date: /Date(1365004652303-0500)/

17
  • 1
    It's UNIX time stamp. Before outputting your JSON convert it from UNIX to normal datetime string.
    – Stan
    May 25, 2013 at 12:57
  • 2
    A UNIX time stamp with timezone offset
    – hek2mgl
    May 25, 2013 at 12:59
  • 1
    Well, that's one option I see, as well as /Date(13650046523030500)/ and then that's where the fun starts :)
    – hakre
    May 25, 2013 at 13:12
  • 3
    Please add more information which API this is.
    – hakre
    May 25, 2013 at 13:15
  • 1
    The odd thing about this timestamp is that it's in milliseconds. If you divide by 1,000, you see a more reasonable number. That's what had me stumped at first. May 25, 2013 at 13:31

11 Answers 11

25

First you need to understand the format you have

/Date(1365004652303-0500)/

Then you have

  • time stamp (U) = 1365004652
  • Milliseconds (u) = 303
  • Difference to Greenwich time (GMT) (O) = -0500

Build a Format

$date = '/Date(1365004652303-0500)/';
preg_match('/(\d{10})(\d{3})([\+\-]\d{4})/', $date, $matches);
$dt = DateTime::createFromFormat("U.u.O",vsprintf('%2$s.%3$s.%4$s', $matches));
echo $dt->format('r');

Output

Wed, 03 Apr 2013 15:57:32 -0500
                            ^
                            |= Can you see the GMT ? 

interface DateFormatParser
{
    /**
     * @param $string
     *
     * @return DateTime
     */
    public function parse($string);

}

abstract class PregDateParser implements DateFormatParser
{
    protected $pattern, $format, $mask;

    public function parse($string) {
        $string = (string)$string;

        $pattern = $this->pattern;
        $format  = $this->format;
        $mask    = $this->mask;

        $r = preg_match($pattern, $string, $matches);
        if (!$r) {
            throw new UnexpectedValueException('Preg Regex Pattern failed.');
        }
        $buffer = vsprintf($mask, $matches);
        $result = DateTime::createFromFormat($format, $buffer);
        if (!$result) {
            throw new UnexpectedValueException(sprintf('Failed To Create from Format "%s" for "%s".', $format, $buffer));
        }
        return $result;
    }
}

class JsonTimestampWithOffsetParser extends PregDateParser
{
    protected $pattern = '/^\/Date\((\d{10})(\d{3})([+-]\d{4})\)\/$/';
    protected $format  = 'U.u.O';
    protected $mask    = '%2$s.%3$s.%4$s';
}

$date   = '/Date(1365004652303-0500)/';
$parser = new JsonTimestampWithOffsetParser;
$dt     = $parser->parse($date);

echo $dt->format('r');
5
  • 2
  • 3
    @KalpeshMehta please note that 0500 is not timezone don't let anyone confuse you
    – Baba
    May 25, 2013 at 13:47
  • I added $dt->sub(new DateInterval('PT5H')); just after $dt=Datetime::createFromFormat.. to subtract 5 hours from the date and it works.
    – Kalpesh
    May 25, 2013 at 14:10
  • Seem to not support negative dates (before 1970)
    – Vivien
    Nov 27, 2018 at 13:43
  • It is important to note that this is close, but not close enough. It will not match negative timestamps, that is times before the 1970 epoch. It will also not work for timestamps with fewer than 10 digits. Also DateTime::createFromFormat() will now ignore any timezone passed to it when decoding unix timezones, so the timezone must be added as a separate step.
    – Jason
    May 30, 2019 at 15:02
7

Try this out:

var_dump(date('Y-m-d H:i:s', '1365004652303'/1000));
$str = '/Date(1365004652303-0500)/';

$match = preg_match('/\/Date\((\d+)([-+])(\d+)\)\//', $str, $date);

$timestamp = $date[1]/1000;
$operator = $date[2];
$hours = $date[3]*36; // Get the seconds

$datetime = new DateTime();

$datetime->setTimestamp($timestamp);
$datetime->modify($operator . $hours . ' seconds');
var_dump($datetime->format('Y-m-d H:i:s'));

Returns:

string(19) "2013-04-03 17:57:32"
string(19) "2013-04-03 12:57:32"
2
  • 1
    This is the correct answer. My answer gets the timezone from the offset, but doesn't correctly account for daylight savings. May 25, 2013 at 14:08
  • Be careful: this will lead to incorrect conversions when hour contains minutes as well, like 0930. Must split hours and minutes and do calculation properly.
    – Ghigo
    Jul 24, 2017 at 9:08
4

Let's break /Date(1365004652303-0500)/ down to:

  • Date
  • 1365004652303
  • -0500

First string makes itself pretty clear.

The next large number is the epoch value

The -0500 represents the timezone in which the dates were originally stored. It is relative to UTC and thus, it is referring to Eastern Standard Time.


EDIT

The epoch is with a milisecond precision. Try this code:

<?php
    $str = "/Date(1365004652303-0500)/";
    preg_match( "#/Date\((\d{10})\d{3}(.*?)\)/#", $str, $match );
    echo date( "r", $match[1] );
?>

You can also use the timezone for setting the date relative to your own. http://codepad.viper-7.com/RrSkMy

4
  • @Jimbo It never gets old :P
    – hjpotter92
    May 25, 2013 at 13:21
  • @hjpotter92 the output is 5 hours ahead.. may be due to timezone.
    – Kalpesh
    May 25, 2013 at 13:28
  • @KalpeshMehta As I mentioned in the reply: You can also use the timezone for setting the date relative to your own.
    – hjpotter92
    May 25, 2013 at 13:32
  • @hjpotter92 - That's fine if the timezone in the date IS set to your own. What happens if he gets a time with offset -0800 and he's in EST? May 25, 2013 at 13:57
2

This timestamp is in milliseconds, which is why it's so large.

You can use the PHP date() call to format this timestamp as you wish. Just divide by 1,000 first. In standard US format, it would be

$mydate = date('m d Y', $timestamp);

(where $timestamp is 1365004652303)

To format it in the format you requested (Y-m-d H:i:s) you would use 'Y-m-d H:i:s' as the format string (first parameter). Chop off text starting with "-".

$stamps = preg_split("/-/", $time);
$stamps[0] = $stamps[0]/1000; 
$mydate = date('Y-m-d H:i:s', $stamps[0]); 

This yields 2013-04-03 11:57:32

Others have suggested the 0500 is an offset; if so, you'd want to adjust $stamps[0] accordingly.

1
  • Never use preg_split() to do what explode() can do. I never use explode() to do what strstr() with a true 3rd param can do. Feb 21, 2020 at 1:31
2

This is what I'm using to parse timestamps from a Xero API. It accounts for:

  • Negative timestamps, dates before the epoch.
  • Timestamps with less than 10 digits (but on the epoch - time zero - not sure what that format would even look like)
  • Fractions of a second.
  • Optional timezone offset, both positive and negative.

Code:

if (preg_match('#^(/Date\()([-]?[0-9]+)([0-9]{3})([+-][0-9]{4})?(\)/)$#', $data, $matches)) {
    // Handle Xero API DateTime formats. Examples:
    // "/Date(1436961673000)/" - unix timestamp with milliseconds
    // "/Date(1436961673000+0100)/" - with an additional timezone correction
    // "/Date(-1436961673000-0530)/" - before the epoch, 1924 here
    //
    // RE matches for "/Date(1436961673090+0100)/":
    // [1] = (/Date\()          "/Date("
    // [2] = ([-]?[0-9]+)       "1436961673"    epoch seconds
    // [3] = ([0-9]{3})         "090"           milliseconds
    // [4] = ([+-][0-9]{4})?    "+0100" or ""   optional timezone
    // [5] = (\)/)              ")"

    $result = \DateTime::createFromFormat('U u', $matches[2] . ' ' . $matches[3] . '000')
        ->setTimezone(new \DateTimeZone($matches[4] ?: '+0000'));
}
1
  • Coming back to this, it can probably be simplified a little more. By removing the parenthesis grouping from the start and the end, there would be just the middle three RE matches to use. [2] to [4] would become [1] to [3].
    – Jason
    Aug 6, 2019 at 9:34
1

If your date is like /Date(-62135578800000)/, a positive or negative integer without timezone:

$date = substr('/Date(-62135578800000)/', 6, -5);
$date = date('m/d/Y H:i:s', $date + date('Z', $date) * -1);
// 01/01/0001 05:00:00
1

I had some slightly different experience which led me to make a couple of slight changes to Baba's excellent answer.

Using Newtonsoft's JSON library to encode messages in .NET, which I then send to our website (the PHP part), I get a space before the timezone offset, and no +/- character.

I have also seen negative numbers from pre-epoch dates which means I needed to cater for a - sign before the millisecond value.

I altered the regex to this and it works perfectly for me:

^/Date(([-]?\d{10})(\d{3})\s?([+-]?\d{4}))/$

The two differences are

[-]? before the 10-digit millisecond value, and \s? before the timezone offset.

I would put this as a comment on Baba's answer, but my lack of reputation doesn't permit me. I hope this is appropriate for me to post here as I thought it might be useful.

0

The following example uses the preg_match() and the DateTime class:

$date = '/Date(1365004652303-0500)/';

// get the timestamp
$pattern = '~/Date\(([0-9]*)~';
preg_match($pattern, $date, $matches);
$timestamp = round(((int) $matches[1]) / 1000);

$dt = new DateTime();
$dt->setTimestamp($timestamp);

echo $dt->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');
4
  • (integer) $matches[1]; fail
    – Baba
    May 25, 2013 at 13:09
  • @Baba :O ?? Which PHP version?
    – hek2mgl
    May 25, 2013 at 13:13
  • 2
    32 bit system ... (int) $matches[1]; would have always returned PHP_INT_MAX
    – Baba
    May 25, 2013 at 13:15
  • I have a 64 bit system. Didn't know that (int) and (integer) behave differently
    – hek2mgl
    May 25, 2013 at 13:19
0

Baba's answer is very helpful, yet it does not cover 3 cases I need:

  • The timestamp may be negative
  • The timestamp may be less than 10 digits
  • GMT offset may be missing.

This is what I use for getting the timestamp:

$date_string = '/Date(-594262800300+0100)/';
preg_match('/([+-]?\d+)([+-]\d{4})?/', $date_string, $matches);
$timestamp = $matches[1] / 1000;
$hours = $matches[2] * 36; // Get the seconds
return $timestamp + $hours;

Again, as Ghigo noted this is not correct if the offset contains minutes, but it works for my case.

3
  • If you have a new question, please ask it by clicking the Ask Question button. Include a link to this question if it helps provide context. - From Review
    – Luceos
    Sep 25, 2018 at 13:07
  • Thanks for the review @Luceos. I do not have a new question, I'm adding more info which was not present in any of the previous answers nor comments, and I believe it might be useful to other users. Sep 27, 2018 at 12:27
  • Your answer is a new evolution of the question. Answers should only answer the question given. You can ask a new question with your situation and answer it yourself. This is allowed if self answered questions pose value to the community.
    – Luceos
    Sep 27, 2018 at 17:33
0

You can use this package to parse the JSON dates:

https://github.com/webapix/dot-net-json-date-formatter

use \Webapix\DotNetJsonDate\Date;

$dateTime = Date::toDateTime('/Date(1365004652303-0500)/'); 
// return with \DateTime object, you can format it: $dateTime->format('Y-m-d H:i:s')
0

Adjusting slightly the excellent answer given by Jason for the Xero API:

if (preg_match('#^\\\/Date\(([-]?[0-9]+)([0-9]{3})([+-][0-9]{4})?\)\\\/$#', $data, $matches)) {
    // Handle Xero API DateTime formats. Examples:
    // "\/Date(1436961673000)\/" - unix timestamp with milliseconds
    // "\/Date(1436961673000+0100)\/" - with an additional timezone correction
    // "\/Date(-1436961673000-0530)\/" - before the epoch, 1924 here
    //
    // RE matches for "\/Date(1436961673090+0100)\/":
    // [1] = ([-]?[0-9]+)       "1436961673"    epoch seconds
    // [2] = ([0-9]{3})         "090"           milliseconds
    // [3] = ([+-][0-9]{4})?    "+0100" or ""   optional timezone
    $result = \DateTime::createFromFormat('U.u', $matches[1] . '.' . $matches[2] . '000')
        ->setTimezone(new \DateTimeZone($matches[3] ?? '+0000'));
}

This uses the current Xero format with additional backslashes, and the simplification to reduce regex groupngs suggested by Jason in a comment.

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