thanks again for all the help.
>The output of strtotime() is an int - specifically a number of
>seconds. Subtract two number of seconds from each other and what do
>you get? Furthermore, divide by 60 and what do you get?
> Should you want to format this, you can consider sprintf(), though,
>if you
On 25 May 2010 21:50, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
> yea, not sure why my Query isn't returning a value though? If I don't
> use date(), what should I use?
The output of strtotime() is an int - specifically a number of
seconds. Subtract two number of seconds from each other and what do
you get? Furthermo
yea, not sure why my Query isn't returning a value though? If I don't
use date(), what should I use?
the SQL for the timestamps looks like this.
`login_timestamp` datetime NOT NULL default '-00-00 00:00:00',
`submit_timestamp` timestamp NOT NULL default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
sorry for the top-po
Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Tue, 2010-05-25 at 14:22 -0400, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
echo "Completion Time:". date('F j, Y
g:i:sa',strtotime($row['submit_timestamp']) -
strtotime($row['login_timestamp']))/60 , "";
There's a good reason for that! What you're actually doing is this:
echo "Completion
On 25 May 2010 21:09, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
> the resulting output with that code is a little weird. I get September
> 3, 1970 2:39:32pm
>
> I think part of the problem is my Query. When I run it in PHP MyAdmin
> I get a null value for login_timestamp even though there is indeed a
> timestamp there
On Tue, 2010-05-25 at 15:09 -0400, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
> the resulting output with that code is a little weird. I get September
> 3, 1970 2:39:32pm
>
> I think part of the problem is my Query. When I run it in PHP MyAdmin
> I get a null value for login_timestamp even though there is indeed a
> t
the resulting output with that code is a little weird. I get September
3, 1970 2:39:32pm
I think part of the problem is my Query. When I run it in PHP MyAdmin
I get a null value for login_timestamp even though there is indeed a
timestamp there. The Query again is:
SELECT
Responses.editor_name,An
On Tue, 2010-05-25 at 14:22 -0400, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
> echo "Completion Time:". date('F j, Y
> g:i:sa',strtotime($row['submit_timestamp']) -
> strtotime($row['login_timestamp']))/60 , "";
There's a good reason for that! What you're actually doing is this:
echo "Completion Time:" .
date('F j,
probably not fully understanding what I need to do.
I am trying this.
echo "Completion Time:". date('F j, Y
g:i:sa',strtotime($row['submit_timestamp']) -
strtotime($row['login_timestamp']))/60 , "";
but just returns a zero value.
On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 12:55 PM, Ashley Sheridan
wrote:
> On
On Tue, 2010-05-25 at 12:46 -0400, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
> Here is what I currently have.
>
> echo "Completion Time:" .
> (strtotime($row['submit_timestamp']) -
> strtotime($row['login_timestamp']))/60 , "";
>
> this gives me an output of 21235172.75
>
> not sure what format that is in? I was ho
Here is what I currently have.
echo "Completion Time:" .
(strtotime($row['submit_timestamp']) -
strtotime($row['login_timestamp']))/60 , "";
this gives me an output of 21235172.75
not sure what format that is in? I was hoping for something like 60
minutes, 30 minutes etc. Don't need the days or
On 25 May 2010 16:14, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
> Thanks. I know my syntax isn't quite right, but is this close to what
> I need to do?
>
> echo "Completion Time:" . date('F j, Y
> g:i:sa', strtotime($row["login_timestamp"] - ["submit_timestamp"])/60)
> . "";
>
No. Assuming that your timestamp is of t
Thanks. I know my syntax isn't quite right, but is this close to what
I need to do?
echo "Completion Time:" . date('F j, Y
g:i:sa', strtotime($row["login_timestamp"] - ["submit_timestamp"])/60)
. "";
On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 10:01 AM, Peter Lind wrote:
> On 25 May 2010 15:55, Bruce Gilbert wro
On 25 May 2010 15:55, Bruce Gilbert wrote:
> Here is the situation. I have a form which sets a timestamp when a
> user logs in using UPDATE in SQL. The field is called
> 'login_timestamp' and is in a table called 'Candidates'. I have
> another timestamp which is set when a user submits the form da
Here is the situation. I have a form which sets a timestamp when a
user logs in using UPDATE in SQL. The field is called
'login_timestamp' and is in a table called 'Candidates'. I have
another timestamp which is set when a user submits the form data into
the DB and it is called 'submit_timestamp' .
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