1

I have a cron job that fires hourly. In my database I have rows that contain UTC offsets. I'm trying to do the following programmatically.

function returnThisHourOffset($timeofday){
    //using the current UTC hour gmdate('G'), determine at what offset from the UTC the $timeofday currently exists (**and which day**).
}

I've written out what happens at each UTC for midnight and 5AM.

    UTC 23:00:00, At offset +1 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset +6 is 5AM, the next UTC day 
    UTC 22:00:00, At offset +2 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset +7 is 5AM, the next UTC day
    UTC 21:00:00, At offset +3 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset +8 is 5AM, the next UTC day
    UTC 20:00:00, At offset +4 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset +9 is 5AM, the next UTC day
    UTC 19:00:00, At offset +5 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset +10 is 5AM, the next UTC day
    UTC 18:00:00, At offset +6 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset +11 is 5AM, the next UTC day
    UTC 17:00:00, At offset +7 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset +12 is 5AM, the next UTC day
    UTC 16:00:00, At offset +8 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset -11 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 15:00:00, At offset +9 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset -10 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 14:00:00, At offset +10 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset -9 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 13:00:00, At offset +11 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset -8 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 12:00:00, At offset +12 is 12AM the next UTC day. At offset -7 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 11:00:00, At offset -11 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset -6 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 10:00:00, At offset -10 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset -5 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 09:00:00, At offset -9 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset -4 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 08:00:00, At offset -8 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset -3 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 07:00:00, At offset -7 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset -2 is 5AM, this UTC day 
    UTC 06:00:00, At offset -6 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset -1 is 5AM, this UTC day  
    UTC 05:00:00, At offset -5 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset 0 is 5AM, this UTC day
    UTC 04:00:00, At offset -4 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset +1 is 5AM, this UTC day
    UTC 03:00:00, At offset -3 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset +2 is 5AM, this UTC day
    UTC 02:00:00, At offset -2 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset +3 is 5AM, this UTC day
    UTC 01:00:00, At offset -1 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset +4 is 5AM, this UTC day
    UTC 00:00:00, At offset 0 is 12AM on the UTC day. At offset +5 is 5AM, this UTC day

So, for example returnThisHourOffset(5) at UTC 8AM should return -3 with today's UTC date. While returnThisHourOffset(5) at UTC 9PM (21:00:00) should return 8 with tomorrow's UTC date (since it's 9AM today and 8 hours later it's 5AM tomorrow).

Obviously, I'm not playing much with daylight savings or offsets > 12. Just trying to keep it simple and it's still looking very complex.

This is my code which is strictly for getting the offset where midnight occurs or what could be returnThisHourOffset(0) I'm looking for any time of day (0-23).

if(gmdate('A') == 'PM'){
        $offset = (24 - gmdate('G'));
        $today = gmdate("Y-m-d\T00\:00\:00", strtotime('tomorrow UTC'));
    } else {
        $offset = -1*(gmdate('G'));
        $today = gmdate("Y-m-d\T00\:00\:00", strtotime('today UTC'));
    }

I'm confident my code isn't the answer to this so I'm hoping someone else has tried to tackle this before in some fashion. Any insight is appreciated.

2

1 Answer 1

0

This looks like it works but I'm open to better suggestions (since it's obviously very messy).

$utcHour = gmdate('G');
$timeofday = 5; // (0-23)

if($utcHour <= $timeofday){
    $offset = $timeofday - $utcHour;
    $today = gmdate("Y-m-d\T00\:00\:00", strtotime('today UTC'));
} elseif ($utcHour > $timeofday && $utcHour - $timeofday < 12){
    $offset = -1*($utcHour - $timeofday);
    $today = gmdate("Y-m-d\T00\:00\:00", strtotime('today UTC'));
} else {
    $offset = (24 - $utcHour) + $timeofday;
    $today = gmdate("Y-m-d\T00\:00\:00", strtotime('tomorrow UTC'));    
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.