The trick here is to find the first date of the appropriate month, then add sixteen days.
These modify()
expressions are helpful.
$mydate->modify ("first day of this month")->modify("+ 16 days");
$mydate->modify ("first day of next month")->modify("+ 16 days");
Next, you can figure out which one you want:
if ($mydate->format("d") > 17) ...
Put it all together like this:
$mydate = DateTime::createFromFormat("d/m/Y", $startdate);
if ($mydate->format("d") > 17) {
$mydate->modify ("first day of this month")->modify("+ 16 days");
}
else {
$mydate->modify ("first day of next month")->modify("+ 16 days");
echo $mydate->format('Y-m-d') . "<br/>\r\n";
And, when you test this sort of thing, be sure to test it with days in December and February to ensure the year-rollover and month-rollover logic works correctly.
$mydate->setDate($mydate->format('Y'), $mydate->format('m'), 17)
, with a bit ofif..else
to figure out whether you want to increase the month by1
or not…?