Doh! Gracias. :-)

At 11:58 PM 7/3/2003 +0000, Philip Olson wrote:

:)

You are using an m where you want an i.

Regards,
Philip


On Thu, 3 Jul 2003, Garrick Linn wrote:


> Hello all,
>
> I seem to be running into a problem where the date() function appears not
> to differentiate properly between unix timestamps.
>
> For example, the code:
>
> <?php
>
> $seconds = 1054278483;
> echo "$seconds<br>";
> echo date("d-m-Y H:m:s", $seconds);
> echo "<br><br>";
>
> $seconds = ($seconds - 60);
> echo "$seconds<br>";
> echo date("d-m-Y H:m:s", $seconds);
> echo "<br><br>";
>
> ?>
>
> outputs
>
> 1054278483
> 30-05-2003 02:05:03
>
> 1054278423
> 30-05-2003 02:05:03
>
> I would expect the second date() to output 30-05-2003 02:04:03 as the
> second timestamp is exactly 60 seconds behind the first, but I might be
> missing something.  I see the same behavior on two redhat linux machines
> running Apache 2.0.40 + PHP 4.2.2 and Apache 1.3.26 + PHP 4.3.2
> respectively.  Any ideas?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Garrick Linn
>
>
>
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