mark107 Posted April 24, 2014 Share Posted April 24, 2014 I need some help with set up the date format. I'm still trying to find out how I can set up the format to the next day, the day two and the day three date when I work out with the hours. Example: I set up the date format from today and the time is 10:00 AM, 11:00 AM, 12:00 PM, the format is 20140424100000, 20140424110000, 20140424120000 and so on until when I reaction to the 12:00 AM, I want to set up the format to the next day 20140425000000, 20140425003000, 20140425020000, 20140425023000 until when I reaction to the next 12:00 AM I want to set up the new format to the day two 20140426000000, 20140426003000, 20140426010000. My problem is when I'm parsing the list of time strings from my script, how I can work out the format with the date and the time? Here is the PHP: <?php ini_set('max_execution_time', 300); $errmsg_arr = array(); $errflag = false; include ('simple_html_dom.php'); foreach($html->find('p[id=links]') as $element) { $program_list[ $count ] = array(); $id_split = explode("?", $element->plaintext); $id_split = explode("&", $link_split[1]); $channels = explode("channels=",$id_split[0]); $channels = $channels[1]; $id = explode("id=",$id_split[1]); $id = $id[1]; $html_two = file_get_html("http://www.mysite.com/myscript.php?getime); //time1 $time1 = $html_two->find('span[id=time1]',0)->plaintext; $hoursMinutes = explode(":", $time1[0]); $hours = $hoursMinutes[0]; $minutes = $hoursMinutes[1]; $time1 = explode(" ", $time1); $hoursMinutes = explode(":", $time1[0]); $hours = $hoursMinutes[0]; $minutes = $hoursMinutes[1]; //time2 $time2 = $html_two->find('span[id=time2]',0)->plaintext; $hoursMinutes = explode(":", $time2[0]); $hours = $hoursMinutes[0]; $minutes = $hoursMinutes[1]; $time2 = explode(" ", $time2); $hoursMinutes = explode(":", $time2[0]); $hours = $hoursMinutes[0]; $minutes = $hoursMinutes[1]; //time3 $time3 = $html_two->find('span[id=time3]',0)->plaintext; $hoursMinutes = explode(":", $time3[0]); $hours = $hoursMinutes[0]; $minutes = $hoursMinutes[1]; $time3 = explode(" ", $time3); $hoursMinutes = explode(":", $time3[0]); $hours = $hoursMinutes[0]; $minutes = $hoursMinutes[1]; ?> Here is the time strings: 10:00 AM 11:00 AM 12:00 PM 12:30 PM 2:00 PM 2:30 PM 9:00 PM 11:00 PM 12:00 AM 12:30 AM 1:00 AM 1:30 AM 2:00 AM 11:00 PM 12:00 AM 12:30 AM 1:00 AM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ch0cu3r Posted April 24, 2014 Share Posted April 24, 2014 Why are you converting a perfectly readable date/time format into a non-readable hard to comprehend format? If you kept the date/time in the original format you can easily modify the date using the dateTime class A couple of examples $date = new DateTime(); $date->add(new DateInterval('P1D')); // add 1 day to todays date echo $date->format('Y-m-d') . "\n"; // Adds 1 hour to an existing date/time $date = new DateTime('2014-04-22 11:23:00'); $date->add(new DateInterval('PT1H')); // add 1 day to todays date echo $date->format('Y-m-d g:i:s') . "\n"; Example: I set up the date format from today and the time is 10:00 AM, 11:00 AM, 12:00 PM, the format is 20140424100000, 20140424110000, 20140424120000 and so on until when I reaction to the 12:00 AM, I want to set up the format to the next day 20140425000000, 20140425003000, 20140425020000, 20140425023000 until when I reaction to the next 12:00 AM I want to set up the new format to the day two 20140426000000, 20140426003000, 20140426010000. I don't understand that due to the hard to comprehend date formats you're posting. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mark107 Posted April 24, 2014 Author Share Posted April 24, 2014 (edited) Because I'm parsing the time to output them in my script. If you don't understand what I want to achieve, here is for example: 10:00 AM 11:00 AM 12:00 PM 12:30 PM 2:00 PM 2:30 PM 3:00 PM 4:00 PM 5:30 PM 6:00 PM 7:00 PM 9:00 PM 11:00 PM 12:00 AM 12:30 AM 1:00 AM 1:30 AM 2:00 AM 11:00 PM 12:00 AM 12:30 AM 1:00 AM These are the time that I'm parsing to output them in my script, so I want to convert these time into format to make it like this: 20140424100000 20140424110000 20140424120000 20140424123000 20140424140000 20140424143000 20140424210000 20140424230000 20140425000000 20140425003000 20140425010000 20140425013000 20140425020000 20140425230000 20140426000000 20140426003000 20140426010000 Here is the output: <span id="time1">10:00 AM</span> <span id="time2">11:00 AM</span> <span id="time3">12:00 PM</span> <span id="time4">12:30 PM</span> <span id="time5">2:00 PM</span> <span id="time6">2:30 PM</span> <span id="time7">9:00 PM</span> <span id="time8">11:00 PM</span> <span id="time9">12:00 AM</span> <span id="time10">12:30 AM</span> <span id="time11">1:00 AM</span> <span id="time12">1:30 AM</span> <span id="time13">2:00 AM</span> <span id="time14">11:00 PM</span> <span id="time15">12:00 AM</span> <span id="time16">12:30 PM</span> <span id="time17">1:00 AM</span> Can you please tell me how to convert these time into format when parsing the time? Edited April 24, 2014 by mark107 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ch0cu3r Posted April 24, 2014 Share Posted April 24, 2014 Thats the problem. Why are your dates in this format? These are the time that I'm parsing to output them in my script, so I want to convert these time into format to make it like this: 20140424100000 20140424110000 20140424120000 20140424123000 20140424140000 20140424143000 20140424210000 20140424230000 20140425000000 20140425003000 20140425010000 20140425013000 20140425020000 20140425230000 20140426000000 20140426003000 20140426010000 You're making it harder for yourself with them being this way. Because they are not in a standard format which php's built in date functions will be able to understand. If you they were in a standard format like YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS then you can just pass the date to a built in date function such as, dateTime and reformat the date into the 12 hour clock format. In order for you to do this you're now going to have to come up with a way to parse your dates so they are presented in a standard format which PHP can then understand. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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