Hi, all
Some days ago, I needed a date, formatted as date("c") ...
To be a bit more object-oriented, I worked with an instance of
DateTime. My first thought was: "As the documenting for date() defines
'c' as ISO8601, I can take the constant provided in the DateTime
object ... right?" ... and that
On Sat, 07 Sep 2013 14:47:00 +0200, Simon Schick wrote:
> The method date("c") actually formats a date, fitting to the format
> defined in the constant DateTime::ATOM.
>
> Are both formats (with and without colon) valid for ISO8601, or is the
> documentation for the method date() wrong?
Yes:
ht
This Q is possibly rather HTML (is there a good list for that...)
anyways;
Im in Sweden, and have done som pages with Swedish text, however our special
(weird) characters åäö
comes out wrong when displayd in browser, would be nice if I could tag the text
and keep the file as is rather
than chan
On Sat, 2013-09-07 at 18:21 +0200, georg chambert wrote:
> This Q is possibly rather HTML (is there a good list for that...)
>
> anyways;
> Im in Sweden, and have done som pages with Swedish text, however our special
> (weird) characters åäö
> comes out wrong when displayd in browser, would be
Hi, Alessandro
Would it be worth noting somewhere, that these two implementations of
ISO8601 differ? Because I needed the DateTime::ATOM way to save the
timezone ... Even so the other one was also about ISO 8601 ...
My system is working towards a search-engine called ElasticSearch.
This one makes
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