I have the following code:
$now = date("Y-m-d H:m:s");
$date = date("Y-m-d H:m:s", strtotime('-24 hours', $now));
However, now it gives me this error:
A non well formed numeric value encountered in...
why is this?
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I have the following code:
$now = date("Y-m-d H:m:s");
$date = date("Y-m-d H:m:s", strtotime('-24 hours', $now));
However, now it gives me this error:
A non well formed numeric value encountered in...
why is this?
$date = (new \DateTime())->modify('-24 hours');
or
$date = (new \DateTime())->modify('-1 day');
(The latter takes into account this comment as it is a valid point.)
Should work fine for you here. See http://PHP.net/datetime
$date will be an instance of DateTime, a real DateTime object.
strtotime()
expects a unix timestamp (which is number seconds since Jan 01 1970
)
$date = date("Y-m-d H:i:s", strtotime('-24 hours', time())); ////time() is default so you do not need to specify.
i would suggest using the datetime library though, since it's a more object oriented approach.
$date = new DateTime(); //date & time of right now. (Like time())
$date->sub(new DateInterval('P1D')); //subtract period of 1 day
The advantage of this is that you can reuse the DateInterval
:
$date = new DateTime(); //date & time of right now. (Like time())
$oneDayPeriod = new DateInterval('P1D'); //period of 1 day
$date->sub($oneDayPeriod);
$date->sub($oneDayPeriod); //2 days are subtracted.
$date2 = new DateTime();
$date2->sub($oneDayPeriod); //can use the same period, multiple times.
Most popular library for processing DateTimes in PHP is Carbon.
Here you would simply do:
$yesterday = Carbon::now()->subDay();
DateTime->sub()
, whcih is the correct way to subtract from a DateTime. Upvote - this ought to have been the accepted answer.
– Mawg says reinstate Monica
Dec 30 '19 at 13:45
you can do this in many ways...
echo date('Y-m-d H:i:s',strtotime('-24 hours')); // "i" for minutes with leading zeros
OR
echo date('Y-m-d H:i:s',strtotime('last day')); // 24 hours (1 day)
Output
2013-07-17 10:07:29
This may be helpful for you:
//calculate like this
$date = date("Y-m-d H:m:s", (time()-(60*60*24)));
//check the date
echo $date;
Simplest way to sub or add time,
<?php
**#Subtract 24 hours**
$dtSub = new DateTime('- 24 hours');
var_dump($dtSub->format('Y-m-d H:m:s'));
**#Add 24 hours**
$dtAdd = new DateTime('24 hours');
var_dump($dtAdd->format('Y-m-d H:m:s'));die;
?>
$now = date("Y-m-d H:i:s");
$date = date("Y-m-d H:i:s", strtotime('-24 hours', strtotime($now)));
Add "strtotime" before $now, and Y-m-d H:m:s replace with Y-m-d H:i:s
You can simply use time()
to get the current timestamp.
$date = date("Y-m-d H:m:s", strtotime('-24 hours', time()));
In same code use strtotime() its working.
$now = date("Y-m-d H:i:s");
$date = date("Y-m-d H:i:s", strtotime('-2 hours', strtotime($now)));
all you have to do is to alter your code to be
$now = strtotime(date("Y-m-d H:m:s"));
$date = date("Y-m-d H:m:s", strtotime('-24 hours', $now));
strtotime
expects a timestamp as the second value. (In your example, you could just omit it completely) – Pekka Jul 18 '13 at 8:16m
is wherei
usually sits in the time portion? Every one of the answers copy pasted this oversight. Ha. – mickmackusa Mar 22 '17 at 1:43i
,m
are months – Qlimax May 24 '17 at 10:12