|  | Posted by Luuk on 06/13/52 12:00 
"Martin" <martinvalley@comcast.net> schreef in bericht news:cbtno3drn5bbvvgfttr4ftjq3r2vvk6vcg@4ax.com...
 > On Mon, 14 Jan 2008 23:34:38 -0000, "Paul Lautman"
 > <paul.lautman@btinternet.com> wrote:
 >
 >>Martin wrote:
 >>> I'm retrieving some records from a database. One of the fields
 >>> contains a date/time. I would like to format it as I send it out to
 >>> the table in the displayed page.
 >>>
 >>> Can some one please tell me how I can/should do that? Or possibly
 >>> point me to an on-line explanation?
 >>>
 >>> Thanks
 >>>
 >>> ps: if it makes any difference, the data is coming from a MS Access
 >>> MDB file which I'm reading in via ODBC.
 >>
 >>It is a 6 step process:
 >>
 >>Step 1) Point your browser at www.google.com
 >>Step 2) In the search box type: php date formatting
 >>Step 3) Click the button labelled "I'm Feeling Lucky"
 >>Step 4) Read the manual page that you are presented with
 >>Step 5) Think "Why did I bother posting this question to usenet when I
 >>could
 >>have found the answer in an instant by doing steps 1-4"
 >>Step 6) Vow to do the obvious and try to help myself in the fuure.
 >>
 >
 > Thanks for the wise-ass answer Paul.
 >
 > The fact of the matter is, I already spent an hour or so Googling and
 > experimenting with various things. In fact, I tried using the exact
 > page that you so politely pointed out. But I quickly found out that
 > that page actually explains how to format the system date value. As
 > I'm sure you'll notice, if you would bother to read my question, I'm
 > trying to format a date/time string that I'm retrieving from a
 > database.
 >
 > I suggest that you re-word your step 5 to: Think "Why did I bother
 > posting this question to a usenet group where I get smart-ass answers
 > that don't do any good".
 >
 >
 >
 >
 
 
 This page where you will end after step 4 says:
 string date ( string $format [, int $timestamp ] )
 
 so, if you use the correct timestamp you get out of your database.....
 
 reading on, i reach example 1,
 >>  // prints something like: 2000-07-01T00:00:00+00:00
 >>  echo date(DATE_ATOM, mktime(0, 0, 0, 7, 1, 2000));
 This will convert the first day of the seventh mont in the yesr 2000 a
 date........
 
 so your suggestion indicates that you did NOT follow step 4 correctly? [ the
 READ part ;) ]
  Navigation: [Reply to this message] |