49

I need to check in PHP if the current time is before 2pm that day.

I've done this with strtotime on dates before, however this time it's with a time only, so obviously at 0.00 each day the time will reset, and the boolean will reset from false to true.

if (current_time < 2pm) {
   // do this
}
4
  • 1
    This is not even valid PHP. What is current_time?
    – KingCrunch
    Commented Dec 12, 2011 at 13:27
  • 8
    @KingCrunch I believe that's pseudo-code, rather than actual code. :-) Commented Dec 12, 2011 at 13:30
  • 2
    I know that's not valid PHP, I was just giving an example of the logic.
    – Adam Moss
    Commented Dec 12, 2011 at 13:31
  • Examples are fine, but when solutions depends on concrete formats (2pm, 14, 14:00, .... ?), then they are not useful.
    – KingCrunch
    Commented Dec 12, 2011 at 14:32

9 Answers 9

100
if (date('H') < 14) {
   $pre2pm = true;
}

For more information about the date function please see the PHP manual. I have used the following time formatter:

H = 24-hour format of an hour (00 to 23)

4
  • 1
    Good point about minutes not being required. Mind linking to docs for 'H'? Commented Dec 12, 2011 at 13:56
  • uk.php.net/manual/en/function.date.php Lists all the different ways of formatting the date. Thinking about it could be cleaner to use 'G', as it doesn't include a leading 0 where the hour is only 1 digit, although PHP isn't fussy enough to let that effect the result of the if statement.
    – Tom
    Commented Dec 12, 2011 at 14:16
  • 2
    Why H and not G ?
    – Feras
    Commented Jan 11, 2019 at 22:37
  • @Feras - good question! As I answered over 7 years ago I’m not sure why I went for H over G. I don’t think you’d get a different outcome but using a value without a leading 0 would make more sense.
    – Tom
    Commented Jan 12, 2019 at 23:23
34

Try:

if(date("Hi") < "1400") {
}

See: http://php.net/manual/en/function.date.php

H   24-hour format of an hour with leading zeros    00 through 23
i   Minutes with leading zeros                      00 to 59
3
  • 1
    heh, was going crazy trying to read that with the $ in front. Didn't help that it said 'Hi' ^^
    – JohnP
    Commented Dec 12, 2011 at 13:30
  • Should 1400 be a string?
    – HippoDuck
    Commented Mar 13, 2020 at 10:46
  • 1
    @user2924019 they will result in the same answer - php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php If you compare a number with a string or the comparison involves numerical strings, then each string is converted to a number and the comparison performed numerically.. Would you get better performance? I don't know, benchmark it! Is one more clear than the other? It depends on your project/organization's style guidelines and how much you prefer brevity to being explicit. My personal preference these days would be if((int)date("Hi") < 1400), but I don't regularly use PHP. Commented Mar 14, 2020 at 23:02
17

You could just pass in the time

if (time() < strtotime('2 pm')) {
   //not yet 2 pm
}

Or pass in the date explicitly as well

if (time() < strtotime('2 pm ' . date('d-m-Y'))) {
   //not yet 2 pm
}
0
7

Use 24 hour time to get round the problem like so:

$time = 1400;
$current_time = (int) date('Hi');
if($current_time < $time) {
    // do stuff
}

So 2PM equates to 14:00 in 24 hour time. If we remove the colon from the time then we can evaluate it as an integer in our comparison.

For more information about the date function please see the PHP manual. I have used the following time formatters:

H = 24-hour format of an hour (00 to 23)

i = Minutes with leading zeros (00 to 59)

1
  • Many years later, it's interesting to note that you don't have to convert a time with colons to an integer. PHP comparison operators are smart enough to know that '13:00' is less than '14:00'! Commented Dec 9, 2021 at 19:18
3

You haven't told us which version of PHP you're running, although, assuming it's PHP 5.2.2+ than you should be able do it like:

$now = new DateTime();
$twoPm = new DateTime();
$twoPm->setTime(14,0); // 2:00 PM

then just ask:

if ( $now < $twoPm ){ // such comparison exists in PHP >= 5.2.2
    // do this
}

otherwise, if you're using one of older version (say, 5.0) this should do the trick (and is much simplier):

$now = time();
$twoPm = mktime(14); // first argument is HOUR

if ( $now < $twoPm ){
    // do this
}
2

If you want to check whether the time is before 2.30 pm ,you can try the following code segment .

if (date('H') < 14.30) {
   $pre2pm = true;   
}else{
   $pre2pm = false;
}
0

Try with

if( time() < mktime(14, 0, 0, date("n"), date("j"), date("Y")) ) {

// do this

}
0

This function will check if it's between hours in EST by accepting 2 params, arrays with the hour and am/pm...

    /**
     * Check if between hours array(12,'pm'), array(2,'pm')
     */
    function is_between_hours($h1 = array(), $h2 = array())
    {
        date_default_timezone_set('US/Eastern');
        $est_hour = date('H');

        $h1 = ($h1[1] == 'am') ? $h1[0] : $h1[0]+12;
        $h1 = ($h1 === 24) ? 12 : $h1;

        $h2 = ($h2[1] == 'am') ? $h2[0] : $h2[0]+12;
        $h2 = ($h2 === 24) ? 12 : $h2;

        if ( $est_hour >= $h1 && $est_hour <= ($h2-1) )
            return true;

        return false;
    }
0

Use time(), date() and strtotime() functions:

if(time() > strtotime(date('Y-m-d').' 14:00') {
    //...
}

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