I have a timestamp stored in a session (1299446702).
How can I convert that to a readable date/time in PHP? I have tried srttotime, etc. to no avail.
strtotime makes a date string into a timestamp. You want to do the opposite, which is date. The typical mysql date format is date('Y-m-d H:i:s');
Check the manual page for what other letters represent.
If you have a timestamp that you want to use (apparently you do), it is the second argument of date()
.
echo date('m/d/Y', strtotime($current_date_variable);
I just added H:i:s to Rocket's answer to get the time along with the date.
echo date('m/d/Y H:i:s', 1299446702);
Output: 03/06/2011 16:25:02
$timestamp = 1465298940;
$datetimeFormat = 'Y-m-d H:i:s';
$date = new \DateTime();
// If you must have use time zones
// $date = new \DateTime('now', new \DateTimeZone('Europe/Helsinki'));
$date->setTimestamp($timestamp);
echo $date->format($datetimeFormat);
result: 2016-06-07 14:29:00
Other time zones:
$date = (new DateTimeImmutable())->setTimestamp($timestamp);
Sep 30, 2022 at 13:18
If you are using PHP date()
, you can use this code to get the date, time, second, etc.
$time = time(); // you have 1299446702 in time
$year = $time/31556926 % 12; // to get year
$week = $time / 604800 % 52; // to get weeks
$hour = $time / 3600 % 24; // to get hours
$minute = $time / 60 % 60; // to get minutes
$second = $time % 60; // to get seconds
If anyone wants timestamp conversion directly to a DateTime object, there's a simple one-liner:
$timestamp = 1299446702;
$date = DateTime::createFromFormat('U', $timestamp);
Following @sromero comment, timezone parameter (the 3rd param in DateTime::createFromFormat()) is ignored when unix timestamp is passed, so the below code is unnecessary.
$date = DateTime::createFromFormat('U', $timestamp, new DateTimeZone('UTC'); // not needed, 3rd parameter is ignored
You may check PHP's manual for DateTime::createFromFormat for more info and options.
Try this one:
echo date('m/d/Y H:i:s', 1541843467);
$epoch = 1483228800;
$dt = new DateTime("@$epoch"); // convert UNIX timestamp to PHP DateTime
echo $dt->format('Y-m-d H:i:s'); // output = 2017-01-01 00:00:00
In the examples above "r" and "Y-m-d H:i:s" are PHP date formats, other examples:
r ----- Wed, 15 Mar 2017 12:00:00 +0100 (RFC 2822 date)
c ----- 2017-03-15T12:00:00+01:00 (ISO 8601 date)
M/d/Y ----- Mar/15/2017
d-m-Y ----- 15-03-2017
Y-m-d H:i:s ----- 2017-03-15 12:00:00
Try it.
<?php
$timestamp=1333342365;
echo gmdate("Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z", $timestamp);
?>
You can try this:
$mytimestamp = 1465298940;
echo gmdate("m-d-Y", $mytimestamp);
Output :
06-07-2016
Unless you need a custom date and time format, it's easier, less error-prone, and more readable to use one of the built-in date time format constants:
echo date(DATE_RFC822, 1368496604);
echo date("l M j, Y",$res1['timep']);
This is really good for converting a unix timestamp to a readable date along with day. Example:
Thursday Jul 7, 2016
None of the above answers work properly if the default time zone of your PHP server is not GMT.
For example. Consider this code that round trips a date to a timestamp and back.
$d0 = new \DateTimeImmutable('1/1/2023');
echo 'Formatted Jan 1, 2023 date = '.$d0->format('Y-m-d H:i:s').'<br>';
$t0 = $d0->getTimestamp();
echo 'Unix timestamp = '.$t0.'<br>';
$d1 = new \DateTimeImmutable('@'.$t0);
echo 'Date from timestamp = '.$d1->format('Y-m-d H:i:s').'<br>';
You would expect the round tripped date to be identical to the original date. Wrong! Output is as follows:
Formatted Jan 1, 2023 date = 2023-01-01 00:00:00
Unix timestamp = 1672556400
Date from timestamp = 2023-01-01 07:00:00
This is because the server time zone is America/Arizona. The documentation clearly states that if a DateTime or DateTimeImmutable object is created from a Unix timestamp, the default time zone or a provided time zone is ignored. (Why?! Why?! Why?!)
To fix this, you need to add this...
$d2 = $d1->setTimeZone(new \DateTimeZone(date_default_timezone_get()));
echo 'Corrected date from timestamp = '.$d2->format('Y-m-d H:i:s').'<br>';
Which outputs this:
Corrected date from timestamp = 2023-01-01 00:00:00
This nails me about every year. Just now I spent 2 hours trying to figure out why my times are all wrong. I went to my test bench and behold! there is my solution to this problem from a year ago. PHP. pfffft.