time()
is in seconds - is there one in milliseconds?
16 Answers
The short answer is:
$milliseconds = floor(microtime(true) * 1000);
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32@FredrikWendt, I think you are confusing with
time()
.microtime(true)
on the other hand returns the current time in seconds since the Unix epoch accurate to the nearest microsecond (see PHP reference). It's actually very easy to test if you run the above code in a loop and display the milliseconds.– laurentDec 18, 2012 at 10:08 -
1You should take only first 13 digits, otherwise you might get a floating number in ~90%: substr(microtime(true) * 1000, 0, 13);– StanEJan 28, 2014 at 9:16
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11Shouldn't that be
microtime(true) / 1000
(division instead of mulitplication)? Apr 17, 2014 at 19:07 -
27@JordanLev, it should be multiplication because microtime(true) returns the Unix timestamp in seconds as a float.– laurentApr 17, 2014 at 21:07
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1@user25163 You are not absolutely right. If you expect timestamp before "Mon, 31 Oct 1966 14:13:21 GMT" and after "Sat, 20 Nov 2286 17:46:39 GMT" it will be more than 13 digits– HendraWDNov 9, 2016 at 10:32
Use microtime
. This function returns a string separated by a space. The first part is the fractional part of seconds, the second part is the integral part. Pass in true
to get as a number:
var_dump(microtime()); // string(21) "0.89115400 1283846202"
var_dump(microtime(true)); // float(1283846202.89)
Beware of precision loss if you use microtime(true)
.
There is also gettimeofday
that returns the microseconds part as an integer.
var_dump(gettimeofday());
/*
array(4) {
["sec"]=>
int(1283846202)
["usec"]=>
int(891199)
["minuteswest"]=>
int(-60)
["dsttime"]=>
int(1)
}
*/
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@COMer:
1000*time()
won't give you milliseconds.microtime(true)
returns afloat
which has 14 digits of precision. The seconds part already took 10, so that left 4 digits for the microseconds part. This should be enough since milliseconds only require 3 extra digits.– kennytmSep 7, 2010 at 8:17
Short answer:
64 bits platforms only!
function milliseconds() {
$mt = explode(' ', microtime());
return intval( $mt[1] * 1E3 ) + intval( round( $mt[0] * 1E3 ) );
}
[ If you are running 64 bits PHP then the constant PHP_INT_SIZE
equals to 8
]
Long answer:
If you want an equilvalent function of time()
in milliseconds first you have to consider that as time()
returns the number of seconds elapsed since the "epoch time" (01/01/1970), the number of milliseconds since the "epoch time" is a big number and doesn't fit into a 32 bits integer.
The size of an integer in PHP can be 32 or 64 bits depending on platform.
From http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.integer.php
The size of an integer is platform-dependent, although a maximum value of about two billion is the usual value (that's 32 bits signed). 64-bit platforms usually have a maximum value of about 9E18, except for Windows, which is always 32 bit. PHP does not support unsigned integers. Integer size can be determined using the constant PHP_INT_SIZE, and maximum value using the constant PHP_INT_MAX since PHP 4.4.0 and PHP 5.0.5.
If you have 64 bits integers then you may use the following function:
function milliseconds() {
$mt = explode(' ', microtime());
return intval( $mt[1] * 1E3 ) + intval( round( $mt[0] * 1E3 ) );
}
microtime()
returns the number of seconds since the "epoch time" with precision up to microseconds with two numbers separated by space, like...
0.90441300 1409263371
The second number is the seconds (integer) while the first one is the decimal part.
The above function milliseconds()
takes the integer part multiplied by 1000
1409263371000
then adds the decimal part multiplied by 1000
and rounded to 0 decimals
1409263371904
Note that both $mt[1]
and the result of round
are casted to int
via intval()
. This is necessary because they are float
s and the operation on them without casting would result in the function returning a float
with a loss in precision.
Finally, that function is slightly more precise than
round(microtime(true)*1000);
that with a ratio of 1:10 (approx.) returns 1 more millisecond than the correct result.
This is due to the limited precision of the float type (microtime(true)
returns a float).
Anyway if you still prefer the shorter round(microtime(true)*1000);
I would suggest casting to int
the result.
Even if it's beyond the scope of the question it's worth mentioning that if your platform supports 64 bits integers then you can also get the current time in microseconds without incurring in overflow.
If fact 2^63 - 1
(biggest signed integer) divided by 10^6 * 3600 * 24 * 365
(approximately the microseconds in one year) gives 292471
.
That's the same value you get with
echo intdiv( PHP_INT_MAX, 1E6 * 3600 * 24 * 365 );
In other words, a signed 64 bits integer have room to store a timespan of over 200,000 years measured in microseconds.
You may have then
function microseconds() {
$mt = explode(' ', microtime());
return intval( $mt[1] * 1E6 ) + intval( round( $mt[0] * 1E6 ) );
}
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why not just: ` function getMilliEpoch(){ $mt = explode(' ', microtime()); return $mt[1] . substr($mt[0], 0, 5) * 1000; }`– MichaelMay 14, 2017 at 8:22
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1Now there is a parameter for microtime function, if it is set to true, it's return the seconds and milliseconds since 1st of january in 1970, 0 hour 0 minutes 0 seconds as float. Here is an example: microtime(true) // 1553260455.7242– kukkoMar 22, 2019 at 13:17
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@kukko yes, but due to limited precision of the float type, calculating the number of millicesonds from microtime(true) will result in a slightly inaccurate value– PaoloMar 23, 2019 at 10:27
As other have stated, you can use microtime()
to get millisecond precision on timestamps.
From your comments, you seem to want it as a high-precision UNIX Timestamp. Something like DateTime.Now.Ticks
in the .NET world.
You may use the following function to do so:
function millitime() {
$microtime = microtime();
$comps = explode(' ', $microtime);
// Note: Using a string here to prevent loss of precision
// in case of "overflow" (PHP converts it to a double)
return sprintf('%d%03d', $comps[1], $comps[0] * 1000);
}
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Is not it return the server time? In my case I see the stored time in db is my local browser time. Suppose, my sever timezone is EST+3 and my browser time is GMT+6, While I submit a form from GMT+6 location, I see the stored time is GMT+6 time equivalent millisecond. So, What is the problem? :(– ZenithSep 16, 2018 at 14:04
Shortest version of string variant (32-bit compatibile):
$milliseconds = date_create()->format('Uv');
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5
echo date('Y-m-d H:i:s.') . gettimeofday()['usec'];
output:
2016-11-19 15:12:34.346351
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1This uses the same timestamp:
$t = gettimeofday(); echo date('Y-m-d H:i:s.',$t['sec']) . $t['usec'];
Oct 2, 2017 at 10:04 -
2microseconds should be zero padded:
$timeofday=gettimeofday(); echo sprintf("%s.%06d", date('Y-m-d H:i:s', $timeofday['sec']), $timeofday['usec']);
– mabiMay 20, 2020 at 5:26
Use microtime(true)
in PHP 5, or the following modification in PHP 4:
array_sum(explode(' ', microtime()));
A portable way to write that code would be:
function getMicrotime()
{
if (version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '5.0.0', '<'))
{
return array_sum(explode(' ', microtime()));
}
return microtime(true);
}
This works even if you are on 32-bit PHP:
list($msec, $sec) = explode(' ', microtime());
$time_milli = $sec.substr($msec, 2, 3); // '1491536422147'
$time_micro = $sec.substr($msec, 2, 6); // '1491536422147300'
Note this doesn't give you integers, but strings. However this works fine in many cases, for example when building URLs for REST requests.
If you need integers, 64-bit PHP is mandatory.
Then you can reuse the above code and cast to (int):
list($msec, $sec) = explode(' ', microtime());
// these parentheses are mandatory otherwise the precedence is wrong!
// ↓ ↓
$time_milli = (int) ($sec.substr($msec, 2, 3)); // 1491536422147
$time_micro = (int) ($sec.substr($msec, 2, 6)); // 1491536422147300
Or you can use the good ol' one-liners:
$time_milli = (int) round(microtime(true) * 1000); // 1491536422147
$time_micro = (int) round(microtime(true) * 1000000); // 1491536422147300
try this:
public function getTimeToMicroseconds() {
$t = microtime(true);
$micro = sprintf("%06d", ($t - floor($t)) * 1000000);
$d = new DateTime(date('Y-m-d H:i:s.' . $micro, $t));
return $d->format("Y-m-d H:i:s.u");
}
PHP 5.2.2 <
$d = new DateTime();
echo $d->format("Y-m-d H:i:s.u"); // u : Microseconds
PHP 7.0.0 < 7.1
$d = new DateTime();
echo $d->format("Y-m-d H:i:s.v"); // v : Milliseconds
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1In php <7.1 new DateTime() microseconds are always 0 see php.net/manual/en/migration71.incompatible.php.– mabiMay 20, 2020 at 5:36
$timeparts = explode(" ",microtime());
$currenttime = bcadd(($timeparts[0]*1000),bcmul($timeparts[1],1000));
echo $currenttime;
NOTE: PHP5 is required for this function due to the improvements with microtime() and the bc math module is also required (as we’re dealing with large numbers, you can check if you have the module in phpinfo).
Hope this help you.
$the_date_time = new DateTime($date_string);
$the_date_time_in_ms = ($the_date_time->format('U') * 1000) +
($the_date_time->format('u') / 1000);
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Not at all. It convert both part to milliseconds and give the sum. So it is more accurate than add zeros. Aug 13, 2015 at 5:53
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1While this code snippet may solve the question, including an explanation really helps to improve the quality of your post. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, and those people might not know the reasons for your code suggestion. Please also try not to crowd your code with explanatory comments, this reduces the readability of both the code and the explanations! May 5, 2016 at 20:11
This is my implementation, should work on 32bit as well.
function mstime(){
$mstime = explode(' ',microtime());
return $mstime[1].''.(int)($mstime[0]*1000);
}
If you want to see real microseconds, you will need to change the precision
setting in php.ini
to 16.
After that, microsecond(true)
gave me the output of 1631882476.298437
.
So I thought that I need to divide the remainder (298437
) with 1000, but in fact, the remainder is 0.298437
of a second. So I need to multiply that by 1000 to get the correct result.
function get_milliseconds()
{
$timestamp = microtime(true);
return (int)(($timestamp - (int)$timestamp) * 1000);
}
I personaly use this:
public static function formatMicrotimestamp(DateTimeInterface $dateTime): int
{
return (int) substr($dateTime->format('Uu'), 0, 13);
}
Use this:
function get_millis(){
list($usec, $sec) = explode(' ', microtime());
return (int) ((int) $sec * 1000 + ((float) $usec * 1000));
}
Bye