My background is C, Java, C#, and VB.NET, but I have to work on some basic PHP stuff. I've gotten to this line of code:
if($flag) $event_end--;
What exactly is being decremented? The raw ticks? $flag (I think) represents if the event is an all-day event, where the start would be 7/1/2010 and end would be 7/2/2010. Does the -- essentially make $event_end [7/1/2010 11:59:59.99999 PM]?
-- edit: ok, cardinal rule of technical questions: explain what you're talking about. guilty. $event_end is orginally being set using the mktime() function. does that help?
Has a function such as strtotime()
been called on the datetime first? This function will return the Unix Timestamp corresponding to the date and time. If the time is 0 (i.e. midnight), subtracting 1 from it (i.e. taking away 1 second), the result will be a time of 23:59:59.
$event_end = '2010-07-30 00:00:00';
$event_end = strtotime($event_end);
$event_end--;
$event_end = date("Y-m-d H:i:s",$event_end);
echo $event_end; //This will result in '2010-07-29 23:59:59'
PHP sees datetime values (as queried from MySQL for example) as simple strings unless they are DateTime objects in which case I don't think subtracting from it would do anything. The only way that operator would affect the value is if it was a timestamp integer.
EDIT: Ah, I see it uses mktime()
. This also returns a Unix Timestamp and therefore can be operated on mathematically. So, to answer your question, indeed the $event_end--;
is subtracting one second.
Updated Code:
$event_end = mktime(0, 0, 0, 7, 30, 2010);
$event_end--;
$event_end = date("Y-m-d H:i:s",$event_end);
echo $event_end; //This will result in '2010-07-29 23:59:59'
It depends entirely how $event_end has been set: PHP has no native concept of a 'datetime'. It might be seconds, milliseconds, or even days depending on where it came from.
You mean a DateTime object? As far as I can tell nothing happens at all.
>> $a = new DateTime()
DateTime::__set_state(array(
'date' => '2010-07-30 12:32:22',
'timezone_type' => 3,
'timezone' => 'UTC',
))
>> $a--;
DateTime::__set_state(array(
'date' => '2010-07-30 12:32:22',
'timezone_type' => 3,
'timezone' => 'UTC',
))
If you mean date/time stored as string, refer to how strings are cast to numbers section in manual.
If $event_end is set by mktime() then it is a long integer containing the number of seconds between the Unix Epoch (January 1 1970 00:00:00 GMT) and the time specified.
$event_end--
will reduce the number by one (one second).