2

Let's say the user can submit their time as strings in one of multiple formats. Is there any way in DateTime::createFromFormat() to specify multiple formats to parse.

Right now I notice if you specify a format, any missing elements cause an error.

For example, lets say I'm accepting both 1h22m34s and a 21m22s as valid time strings (the second implies 00h, but doesn't require it).

The following will throw an error on the second string when seen:

   $mytime = `21m22s`;
   echo DateTime::createFromFormat('H\hi\ms\s',$mytime)->format('H:i:s');

How can I work to allow it to parse multiple formats?

Or is there another, non-hack way to work with multiple formats?

7
  • createFromFormat doesn't throw an error, it just returns false, but yeah, just create an array of acceptable formats, loop through them until it doesn't fail.
    – dave
    Apr 19, 2017 at 17:57
  • @JohnConde ouch! I'm hoping there's another option. I'm in the camp that exceptions should be exceptional, not part of your expected code flow.
    – Ray
    Apr 19, 2017 at 17:58
  • you can decide which format based on the length of the string,isn't ideal either but I guess it could work
    – Gal Sisso
    Apr 19, 2017 at 18:27
  • That's not a date or a time, that's a duration. Trying to shoehorn that into a DateTime object is going to bring you nothing but misery. Parse it yourself and convert it to a number of seconds.
    – Sammitch
    Apr 19, 2017 at 18:37
  • @Gal in this case length might work, but sometimes the formats are the same length. Think about something like12:53:01 vs 12:53 01 I'm sure along the same lines you could try a regex control logic, but I'm really hoping for something more elegant within the DateTime class. Who knows, if it doesn't exist maybe I'll create something and issue a pull request to the PHP folks!
    – Ray
    Apr 19, 2017 at 18:39

2 Answers 2

4

I know it's been some time but here is a solution based on @dave 's comment.

$date ='20200702';
$formats = ['Y-m-d', 'Y/m/d', 'Ymd'];
$dateObj = null;
foreach ($formats as $format) {
    if ($dateObj = Carbon::createFromFormat($format, $date)){
        break;   
    }
}

If you're using Carbon then here is another solution because the behaviour is slightly different.

$date = '20200727';
$formats = ['Y-m-d', 'Y/m/d', 'Ymd'];
$dateObj = null;
foreach ($formats as $format) {
    try{
        if ($dateObj = Carbon::createFromFormat($format, $date)){
            break;   
        }
    } catch (InvalidArgumentException $e) {
        Log::debug('date', [$dateObj]); // It's null
    }
}
1
  • 1
    Thanks for sharing! I was able to use this to help with handling an API call that returns data with various date formats.
    – Josh
    Sep 24, 2020 at 21:05
0

If it's just the separators that might vary in the input you can use wildcards to represent them. Carbon\Carbon::createFromFormat('d*m*Y', $date); will handle any of the following formats, and more. $date = '11/6/1990'; $date = '11-6-1990'; $date = '11!6/1990';

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