3

I wanted to know a good and efficient way to be able to tell how long ago my users last logged in.

On the users profile I want it for say how long ago their last log in was.

Eg:

User 1 Last login: 2 hours ago

User 2 Last login: 3 minutes ago

User 3 Last login: 2 months ago


I will keep their last login information in a MySQL database but want to know how to do the script.

I just realized that Stackoverflow uses this feature, so that can help you understand what I want.


mysql_query("UPDATE users SET lastactivity = ".time()." WHERE id = ".$userID);

This is how I will update the DB.

2
  • What have you tried? Stack Overflow should be used for specific questions. You should use google instead. Mar 8, 2012 at 14:49
  • I havnt tried it yet, I just want a quicker way to do it then I would. My script would be too long.
    – SDZ
    Mar 8, 2012 at 14:50

2 Answers 2

10

Each page request just update their last activity.

<?php

mysql_query("UPDATE users SET lastactivity = ".time()." WHERE id = ".$userID);

to show when they were last online, just select their lastactivity field from database and show it

<?php
$activity = mysql_result(mysql_query("SELECT lastactivity FROM users WHERE id = ".$userID), 0);
echo "Last activity: ".relativeTime($active);

where relativeTime() is function I've been using:

function relativeTime($time, $short = false){
    $SECOND = 1;
    $MINUTE = 60 * $SECOND;
    $HOUR = 60 * $MINUTE;
    $DAY = 24 * $HOUR;
    $MONTH = 30 * $DAY;
    $before = time() - $time;

    if ($before < 0)
    {
        return "not yet";
    }

    if ($short){
        if ($before < 1 * $MINUTE)
        {
            return ($before <5) ? "just now" : $before . " ago";
        }

        if ($before < 2 * $MINUTE)
        {
            return "1m ago";
        }

        if ($before < 45 * $MINUTE)
        {
            return floor($before / 60) . "m ago";
        }

        if ($before < 90 * $MINUTE)
        {
            return "1h ago";
        }

        if ($before < 24 * $HOUR)
        {

            return floor($before / 60 / 60). "h ago";
        }

        if ($before < 48 * $HOUR)
        {
            return "1d ago";
        }

        if ($before < 30 * $DAY)
        {
            return floor($before / 60 / 60 / 24) . "d ago";
        }


        if ($before < 12 * $MONTH)
        {
            $months = floor($before / 60 / 60 / 24 / 30);
            return $months <= 1 ? "1mo ago" : $months . "mo ago";
        }
        else
        {
            $years = floor  ($before / 60 / 60 / 24 / 30 / 12);
            return $years <= 1 ? "1y ago" : $years."y ago";
        }
    }

    if ($before < 1 * $MINUTE)
    {
        return ($before <= 1) ? "just now" : $before . " seconds ago";
    }

    if ($before < 2 * $MINUTE)
    {
        return "a minute ago";
    }

    if ($before < 45 * $MINUTE)
    {
        return floor($before / 60) . " minutes ago";
    }

    if ($before < 90 * $MINUTE)
    {
        return "an hour ago";
    }

    if ($before < 24 * $HOUR)
    {

        return (floor($before / 60 / 60) == 1 ? 'about an hour' : floor($before / 60 / 60).' hours'). " ago";
    }

    if ($before < 48 * $HOUR)
    {
        return "yesterday";
    }

    if ($before < 30 * $DAY)
    {
        return floor($before / 60 / 60 / 24) . " days ago";
    }

    if ($before < 12 * $MONTH)
    {

        $months = floor($before / 60 / 60 / 24 / 30);
        return $months <= 1 ? "one month ago" : $months . " months ago";
    }
    else
    {
        $years = floor  ($before / 60 / 60 / 24 / 30 / 12);
        return $years <= 1 ? "one year ago" : $years." years ago";
    }

    return "$time";
}
7
  • I know that but I want to tell me how long ago they were seen.
    – SDZ
    Mar 8, 2012 at 14:49
  • The answer is just as short as easy! But you forgot the PHP closing tag. :-P
    – MC Emperor
    Mar 8, 2012 at 14:53
  • You should read about 'DateTime:diff' and DateInterval in the php manual. Mar 8, 2012 at 14:54
  • relativeTime() is the part I wanted. I wouldn't know how to do it correctly.
    – SDZ
    Mar 8, 2012 at 14:57
  • @MCEmperor: that's NOT required and even discouraged
    – Martin.
    Mar 8, 2012 at 15:17
0

In addition to what @Martin. said, you can get the current timestamp using time(), and then retrieve the last login timestamp from the database, and subtract it from the current timestamp.

<?php

$date = strtotime("2012-03-08 16:02:35");
$now = time();
$diff = $now - $date;

?>

...then $diff is the time difference in seconds. Then you can calculate whatever you want.

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