0

I have built a function to change a given Y-m-d date like this: 2016-07-02 to this format: July 2nd.

The code:

// Format the given Y-M-D date
function format_date($date) {
    // Parse the date
    list($year, $month, $day) = array_values(date_parse($date));

    // Give the appropriate subscript to the day number
    $last_char = substr($day, -1);
    $pre_last_char = (strlen($day) > 1) ? substr($day, -2, -1) : null;
    $subscript = ($last_char === "1") ? "st" :
                 ($last_char === "2") ? "nd" :
                 ($last_char === "3") ? "rd" : "th";
    $subscript = ($pre_last_char === "1") ? "th" : $subscript;
    $day .= $subscript;

    // Get the month's name based on its number
    $months = [
        "1" => "January",
        "2" => "February",
        "3" => "March",
        "4" => "April",
        "5" => "May",
        "6" => "June",
        "7" => "July",
        "8" => "August",
        "9" => "September",
        "10" => "October",
        "11" => "November",
        "12" => "December"
    ];
    $month = $months[$month];

    // Omit the year if it's this year and assemble the date
    return $date = ($year === date("Y")) ? "$month $day $year" : "$month $day";
}

The function works as expected, but there's a catch. The first conditional ternary operator for $subscript returns "rd" for every number that ends in 1 and 2.

Example:

echo format_date("2016-01-01"); // It will output January 1rd

How can I fix that?

4

3 Answers 3

5

Documentation reads:

Note: It is recommended that you avoid "stacking" ternary expressions. PHP's behaviour when using more than one ternary operator within a single statement is non-obvious:

<?php
// on first glance, the following appears to output 'true'
echo (true?'true':false?'t':'f');

// however, the actual output of the above is 't'
// this is because ternary expressions are evaluated from left to right

// the following is a more obvious version of the same code as above
echo ((true ? 'true' : false) ? 't' : 'f');

// here, you can see that the first expression is evaluated to 'true', which
// in turn evaluates to (bool)true, thus returning the true branch of the
// second ternary expression.
?>
1
  • Alex, thanks for the detail you've gone into in your answer. It seems I've fallen once again in the same trap by not parenthesizing correctly. I tried your suggestion and it worked greatly! Jul 2, 2016 at 15:46
3

This is because PHP got the ternary operator wrong - it is left-associative instead of the right-associative of C, Java and so forth. Thus when converting C code to PHP you must parenthesize the "true" and "false" expressions.

1
  • Thanks a lot for the links @Antti. Jul 2, 2016 at 15:40
2

Not a direct answer to your question, but if you only need English like in your example, you can use php's standard date functions:

echo date('F jS', strtotime('2016-01-01'));

Output:

January 1st

See a working example here.

1
  • 1
    Thanks @jeroen. I didn't know of this function. Upvoted! Jul 2, 2016 at 15:42

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.