CakeFest 2024: The Official CakePHP Conference

DateTimeInterface::diff

DateTimeImmutable::diff

DateTime::diff

date_diff

(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)

DateTimeInterface::diff -- DateTimeImmutable::diff -- DateTime::diff -- date_diffReturns the difference between two DateTime objects

Açıklama

Nesne yönelimli kullanım

public DateTimeInterface::diff(DateTimeInterface $targetObject, bool $absolute = false): DateInterval
public DateTimeImmutable::diff(DateTimeInterface $targetObject, bool $absolute = false): DateInterval
public DateTime::diff(DateTimeInterface $targetObject, bool $absolute = false): DateInterval

Yordamsal kullanım

date_diff(DateTimeInterface $baseObject, DateTimeInterface $targetObject, bool $absolute = false): DateInterval

Returns the difference between two DateTimeInterface objects.

Bağımsız Değişkenler

datetime

The date to compare to.

absolute

Should the interval be forced to be positive?

Dönen Değerler

The DateInterval object represents the difference between the two dates.

The return value more specifically represents the clock-time interval to apply to the original object ($this or $originObject) to arrive at the $targetObject. This process is not always reversible.

The method is aware of DST changeovers, and hence can return an interval of 24 hours and 30 minutes, as per one of the examples. If you want to calculate with absolute time, you need to convert both the $this/$baseObject, and $targetObject to UTC first.

Örnekler

Örnek 1 DateTimeImmutable::diff() example

Nesne yönelimli kullanım

<?php
$origin
= new DateTimeImmutable('2009-10-11');
$target = new DateTimeImmutable('2009-10-13');
$interval = $origin->diff($target);
echo
$interval->format('%R%a days');
?>

Yordamsal kullanım

<?php
$origin
= date_create('2009-10-11');
$target = date_create('2009-10-13');
$interval = date_diff($origin, $target);
echo
$interval->format('%R%a days');
?>

Yukarıdaki örneklerin çıktısı:

+2 days

Örnek 2 DateTimeInterface::diff() during DST changeover

<?php
$originalTime
= new DateTimeImmutable("2021-10-30 09:00:00 Europe/London");
$targedTime = new DateTimeImmutable("2021-10-31 08:30:00 Europe/London");
$interval = $originalTime->diff($targedTime);
echo
$interval->format("%H:%I:%S (Full days: %a)"), "\n";
?>

Yukarıdaki örneğin çıktısı:

24:30:00 (Full days: 0)

Örnek 3 DateTimeInterface::diff() range

The value that the method returns is the exact amount of time to get from $this to $targetObject. Comparing January 1st to December 31st returns therefore 364, and not 365, days (for non-leap years).

<?php
$originalTime
= new DateTimeImmutable("2023-01-01 UTC");
$targedTime = new DateTimeImmutable("2023-12-31 UTC");
$interval = $originalTime->diff($targedTime);
echo
"Full days: ", $interval->format("%a"), "\n";
?>

Yukarıdaki örneğin çıktısı:

Full days: 364

Örnek 4 DateTime object comparison

Bilginize:

DateTimeImmutable and DateTime objects can be compared using comparison operators.

<?php
$date1
= new DateTime("now");
$date2 = new DateTime("tomorrow");

var_dump($date1 == $date2);
var_dump($date1 < $date2);
var_dump($date1 > $date2);
?>

Yukarıdaki örneğin çıktısı:

bool(false)
bool(true)
bool(false)

Ayrıca Bakınız

  • DateInterval::format() - Zaman aralığını biçimler
  • DateTime::add() - Modifies a DateTime object, with added amount of days, months, years, hours, minutes and seconds
  • DateTime::sub() - Subtracts an amount of days, months, years, hours, minutes and seconds from a DateTime object
add a note

User Contributed Notes

There are no user contributed notes for this page.
To Top