How to calculate minute difference between two date-times in PHP?
Subtract the past most one from the future most one and divide by 60.
Times are done in Unix format so they're just a big number showing the number of seconds from January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT
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1@Jerald How this solution works for you? Do you mind to brief it at least a little bit? Thanks. – Wafie Ali Mar 29 '17 at 1:59
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5@WafieAli $nInterval = strtotime($sDate2) - strtotime($sDate1); this will return the time difference in seconds, then you can just divide by 60 like this. $nInterval = $nInterval/60; – Jerald Jul 11 '17 at 10:27
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+1 for explaining what needs to be done and not using the useless DateInterval class that doesn't have a method to do just that: return difference in minutes. – AndreKR Jun 10 at 19:47
The answers above are for older versions of PHP. Use the DateTime class to do any date calculations now that PHP 5.3 is the norm. Eg.
$start_date = new DateTime('2007-09-01 04:10:58');
$since_start = $start_date->diff(new DateTime('2012-09-11 10:25:00'));
echo $since_start->days.' days total<br>';
echo $since_start->y.' years<br>';
echo $since_start->m.' months<br>';
echo $since_start->d.' days<br>';
echo $since_start->h.' hours<br>';
echo $since_start->i.' minutes<br>';
echo $since_start->s.' seconds<br>';
$since_start is a DateInterval object. Note that the days property is available (because we used the diff method of the DateTime class to generate the DateInterval object).
The above code will output:
1837 days total
5 years
0 months
10 days
6 hours
14 minutes
2 seconds
To get the total number of minutes:
$minutes = $since_start->days * 24 * 60;
$minutes += $since_start->h * 60;
$minutes += $since_start->i;
echo $minutes.' minutes';
This will output:
2645654 minutes
Which is the actual number of minutes that has passed between the two dates. The DateTime class will take daylight saving (depending on timezone) into account where the "old way" won't. Read the manual about Date and Time http://www.php.net/manual/en/book.datetime.php
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11Pitty DateInterval does not have method like
inSeconds()
or something similar, now it's code repetition everywhere I need to calculate difference in seconds. – Marius Balčytis Nov 29 '12 at 7:32 -
5@barius Or you can write a function that wraps the repeating code, or even extend DateTime and not repeat your code. – Anther Apr 16 '13 at 17:41
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15
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7Using the new DateTime class is good, but why generate a DateInterval that then has to be decoded so awkwardly?
$dateFrom = new DateTime('2007-09-01 04:10:58'); $dateTo = new DateTime('2012-09-11 10:25:00'); echo ($dateTo->getTimestamp()-$dateFrom->getTimestamp())/60 ;
– dkloke Dec 14 '14 at 22:43 -
2Can someone explain to me why this is better than the
strtotime
answer above it? This seems like a case of OOP when Procedural is AT LEAST as valid (and considerably more concise) solution. – Bing Jul 25 '16 at 5:05
Here is the answer:
$to_time = strtotime("2008-12-13 10:42:00");
$from_time = strtotime("2008-12-13 10:21:00");
echo round(abs($to_time - $from_time) / 60,2). " minute";
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4
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33For those wondering, the
/ 60,2
means: divide by sixty, round to the nearest two decimal places. – Bing Jul 25 '16 at 5:09 -
3strtotime is unreliable, avoid. Only works for specific date formats, mostly US-related. – sivann Sep 26 '16 at 15:06
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13
strtotime
may be obsolete but it's not unreliable if you use it properly. It stands to reason you need to be working with consistent date formats to be able to read (or parse) the dates correctly. SeeISO 8601
and don't blame the tools :=) – Phil Oct 4 '16 at 21:29 -
<?php
$date1 = time();
sleep(2000);
$date2 = time();
$mins = ($date2 - $date1) / 60;
echo $mins;
?>
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1
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2What better way to use your time whilst waiting for another time to compare to than have a quick sleep. although this should in theory give you an answer of 2, which could help people trying to understand the formula, confirming it's correct. – slappy-x Feb 5 at 23:59
It worked on my programs, i'am using date_diff
, you can check date_diff
manual on here.
$start = date_create('2015-01-26 12:01:00');
$end = date_create('2015-01-26 13:15:00');
$diff=date_diff($end,$start);
print_r($diff);
You get results what do you want.
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1Strange, for me, executing that code does not provide the time difference in minutes – Nico Haase Feb 1 at 8:56
another way with timezone.
$start_date = new DateTime("2013-12-24 06:00:00",new DateTimeZone('Pacific/Nauru'));
$end_date = new DateTime("2013-12-24 06:45:00", new DateTimeZone('Pacific/Nauru'));
$interval = $start_date->diff($end_date);
$hours = $interval->format('%h');
$minutes = $interval->format('%i');
echo 'Diff. in minutes is: '.($hours * 60 + $minutes);
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4
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4If you want days, too, than you add
$days = $interval->format('%d');
and the diff is($days * 1440 + $hours * 60 + $minutes)
. For months, years => same logic – Seer Jan 22 '14 at 11:01
I wrote this function for one my blog site(difference between a past date and server's date). It will give you an output like this
"49 seconds ago", "20 minutes ago", "21 hours ago" and so on
I have used a function that would get me the difference between the date passed and the server's date.
<?php
//Code written by purpledesign.in Jan 2014
function dateDiff($date)
{
$mydate= date("Y-m-d H:i:s");
$theDiff="";
//echo $mydate;//2014-06-06 21:35:55
$datetime1 = date_create($date);
$datetime2 = date_create($mydate);
$interval = date_diff($datetime1, $datetime2);
//echo $interval->format('%s Seconds %i Minutes %h Hours %d days %m Months %y Year Ago')."<br>";
$min=$interval->format('%i');
$sec=$interval->format('%s');
$hour=$interval->format('%h');
$mon=$interval->format('%m');
$day=$interval->format('%d');
$year=$interval->format('%y');
if($interval->format('%i%h%d%m%y')=="00000")
{
//echo $interval->format('%i%h%d%m%y')."<br>";
return $sec." Seconds";
}
else if($interval->format('%h%d%m%y')=="0000"){
return $min." Minutes";
}
else if($interval->format('%d%m%y')=="000"){
return $hour." Hours";
}
else if($interval->format('%m%y')=="00"){
return $day." Days";
}
else if($interval->format('%y')=="0"){
return $mon." Months";
}
else{
return $year." Years";
}
}
?>
Save it as a file suppose "date.php". Call the function from another page like this
<?php
require('date.php');
$mydate='2014-11-14 21:35:55';
echo "The Difference between the server's date and $mydate is:<br> ";
echo dateDiff($mydate);
?>
Of course you can modify the function to pass two values.
I think this will help you
function calculate_time_span($date){
$seconds = strtotime(date('Y-m-d H:i:s')) - strtotime($date);
$months = floor($seconds / (3600*24*30));
$day = floor($seconds / (3600*24));
$hours = floor($seconds / 3600);
$mins = floor(($seconds - ($hours*3600)) / 60);
$secs = floor($seconds % 60);
if($seconds < 60)
$time = $secs." seconds ago";
else if($seconds < 60*60 )
$time = $mins." min ago";
else if($seconds < 24*60*60)
$time = $hours." hours ago";
else if($seconds < 24*60*60)
$time = $day." day ago";
else
$time = $months." month ago";
return $time;
}
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Please add some explanation to your code such that the OP can learn from it – Nico Haase Feb 1 at 8:56
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function date_getFullTimeDifference( $start, $end )
{
$uts['start'] = strtotime( $start );
$uts['end'] = strtotime( $end );
if( $uts['start']!==-1 && $uts['end']!==-1 )
{
if( $uts['end'] >= $uts['start'] )
{
$diff = $uts['end'] - $uts['start'];
if( $years=intval((floor($diff/31104000))) )
$diff = $diff % 31104000;
if( $months=intval((floor($diff/2592000))) )
$diff = $diff % 2592000;
if( $days=intval((floor($diff/86400))) )
$diff = $diff % 86400;
if( $hours=intval((floor($diff/3600))) )
$diff = $diff % 3600;
if( $minutes=intval((floor($diff/60))) )
$diff = $diff % 60;
$diff = intval( $diff );
return( array('years'=>$years,'months'=>$months,'days'=>$days, 'hours'=>$hours, 'minutes'=>$minutes, 'seconds'=>$diff) );
}
else
{
echo "Ending date/time is earlier than the start date/time";
}
}
else
{
echo "Invalid date/time data detected";
}
}
A more universal version that returns result in days, hours, minutes or seconds including fractions/decimals:
function DateDiffInterval($sDate1, $sDate2, $sUnit='H') {
//subtract $sDate2-$sDate1 and return the difference in $sUnit (Days,Hours,Minutes,Seconds)
$nInterval = strtotime($sDate2) - strtotime($sDate1);
if ($sUnit=='D') { // days
$nInterval = $nInterval/60/60/24;
} else if ($sUnit=='H') { // hours
$nInterval = $nInterval/60/60;
} else if ($sUnit=='M') { // minutes
$nInterval = $nInterval/60;
} else if ($sUnit=='S') { // seconds
}
return $nInterval;
} //DateDiffInterval
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Please add some explanation to your code such that the OP can learn from it – Nico Haase Feb 1 at 8:57
This is how I displayed "xx times ago" in php > 5.2 .. here is more info on DateTime object
//Usage:
$pubDate = $row['rssfeed']['pubDates']; // e.g. this could be like 'Sun, 10 Nov 2013 14:26:00 GMT'
$diff = ago($pubDate); // output: 23 hrs ago
// Return the value of time different in "xx times ago" format
function ago($timestamp)
{
$today = new DateTime(date('y-m-d h:i:s')); // [2]
//$thatDay = new DateTime('Sun, 10 Nov 2013 14:26:00 GMT');
$thatDay = new DateTime($timestamp);
$dt = $today->diff($thatDay);
if ($dt->y > 0)
{
$number = $dt->y;
$unit = "year";
}
else if ($dt->m > 0)
{
$number = $dt->m;
$unit = "month";
}
else if ($dt->d > 0)
{
$number = $dt->d;
$unit = "day";
}
else if ($dt->h > 0)
{
$number = $dt->h;
$unit = "hour";
}
else if ($dt->i > 0)
{
$number = $dt->i;
$unit = "minute";
}
else if ($dt->s > 0)
{
$number = $dt->s;
$unit = "second";
}
$unit .= $number > 1 ? "s" : "";
$ret = $number." ".$unit." "."ago";
return $ret;
}
<?php
$start = strtotime('12:01:00');
$end = strtotime('13:16:00');
$mins = ($end - $start) / 60;
echo $mins;
?>
Output:
75
My solution to find the difference between two dates is here. With this function you can find differences like seconds, minutes, hours, days, years and months.
function alihan_diff_dates($date = null, $diff = "minutes") {
$start_date = new DateTime($date);
$since_start = $start_date->diff(new DateTime( date('Y-m-d H:i:s') )); // date now
print_r($since_start);
switch ($diff) {
case 'seconds':
return $since_start->s;
break;
case 'minutes':
return $since_start->i;
break;
case 'hours':
return $since_start->h;
break;
case 'days':
return $since_start->d;
break;
default:
# code...
break;
}
}
You can develop this function. I tested and works for me. DateInterval object output is here:
/*
DateInterval Object ( [y] => 0 [m] => 0 [d] => 0 [h] => 0 [i] => 5 [s] => 13 [f] => 0 [weekday] => 0 [weekday_behavior] => 0 [first_last_day_of] => 0 [invert] => 0 [days] => 0 [special_type] => 0 [special_amount] => 0 [have_weekday_relative] => 0 [have_special_relative] => 0 )
*/
Function Usage:
$date = the past date, $diff = type eg: "minutes", "days", "seconds"
$diff_mins = alihan_diff_dates("2019-03-24 13:24:19", "minutes");
Good Luck.
This will help....
function get_time($date,$nosuffix=''){
$datetime = new DateTime($date);
$interval = date_create('now')->diff( $datetime );
if(empty($nosuffix))$suffix = ( $interval->invert ? ' ago' : '' );
else $suffix='';
//return $interval->y;
if($interval->y >=1) {$count = date(VDATE, strtotime($date)); $text = '';}
elseif($interval->m >=1) {$count = date('M d', strtotime($date)); $text = '';}
elseif($interval->d >=1) {$count = $interval->d; $text = 'day';}
elseif($interval->h >=1) {$count = $interval->h; $text = 'hour';}
elseif($interval->i >=1) {$count = $interval->i; $text = 'minute';}
elseif($interval->s ==0) {$count = 'Just Now'; $text = '';}
else {$count = $interval->s; $text = 'second';}
if(empty($text)) return '<i class="fa fa-clock-o"></i> '.$count;
return '<i class="fa fa-clock-o"></i> '.$count.(($count ==1)?(" $text"):(" ${text}s")).' '.$suffix;
}
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1Please add some explanation to your code such that the OP can learn from it – Nico Haase Feb 1 at 8:57
I found so many solution but I never got correct solution. But i have created some code to find minutes please check it.
<?php
$time1 = "23:58";
$time2 = "01:00";
$time1 = explode(':',$time1);
$time2 = explode(':',$time2);
$hours1 = $time1[0];
$hours2 = $time2[0];
$mins1 = $time1[1];
$mins2 = $time2[1];
$hours = $hours2 - $hours1;
$mins = 0;
if($hours < 0)
{
$hours = 24 + $hours;
}
if($mins2 >= $mins1) {
$mins = $mins2 - $mins1;
}
else {
$mins = ($mins2 + 60) - $mins1;
$hours--;
}
if($mins < 9)
{
$mins = str_pad($mins, 2, '0', STR_PAD_LEFT);
}
if($hours < 9)
{
$hours =str_pad($hours, 2, '0', STR_PAD_LEFT);
}
echo $hours.':'.$mins;
?>
It gives output in hours and minutes for example 01 hour 02 minutes like 01:02
Subtract the times and divide by 60.
Here is an example which calculate elapsed time from 2019/02/01 10:23:45
in minutes:
$diff_time=(strtotime(date("Y/m/d H:i:s"))-strtotime(2019/02/01 10:23:45))/60;