idate
Format a local time/date as integer
Description
int idate
( string $format
[, int $timestamp
= time()
] )
Unlike the function date, idate
accepts just one char in the format
parameter.
Parameters
-
format
-
The following characters are recognized in the
format
parameter string
format character |
Description |
B |
Swatch Beat/Internet Time |
d |
Day of the month |
h |
Hour (12 hour format) |
H |
Hour (24 hour format) |
i |
Minutes |
I (uppercase i) |
returns 1 if DST is activated,
0 otherwise |
L (uppercase l) |
returns 1 for leap year,
0 otherwise |
m |
Month number |
s |
Seconds |
t |
Days in current month |
U |
Seconds since the Unix Epoch - January 1 1970 00:00:00 UTC -
this is the same as time |
w |
Day of the week (0 on Sunday) |
W |
ISO-8601 week number of year, weeks starting on
Monday |
y |
Year (1 or 2 digits - check note below) |
Y |
Year (4 digits) |
z |
Day of the year |
Z |
Timezone offset in seconds |
-
timestamp
-
The optional timestamp
parameter is an
integer Unix timestamp that defaults to the current
local time if a timestamp
is not given. In other
words, it defaults to the value of time.
Return Values
Returns an integer.
As idate always returns an integer and
as they can't start with a "0", idate may return
fewer digits than you would expect. See the example below.
Errors/Exceptions
Every call to a date/time function will generate a E_NOTICE
if the time zone is not valid, and/or a E_STRICT
or E_WARNING
message
if using the system settings or the TZ environment
variable. See also date_default_timezone_set
Examples
Example #1 idate example
<?php
$timestamp = strtotime('1st January 2004'); //1072915200
// this prints the year in a two digit format
// however, as this would start with a "0", it
// only prints "4"
echo idate('y', $timestamp);
?>