Reputation: 3463
I want to pass my PHP server time to my JavaScript file.
PHP Code:
date_default_timezone_set('Australia/Perth');
echo date("r");
JavaScript:
$.get('time.php', function(data) {
today = new Date(data);
closing = new Date(data);
});
The PHP code returns Sun, 18 Mar 2012 12:01:23 +0800 which is correct time for Australia/Perth. But this returns an invalid JavaScript date object.
When I try to convert it to timestamp like:
echo strtotime(date("r"));
I get the JavaScript date Sun Mar 18 2012 04:03:14 GMT+0000 (WET) (this is the value of today js var)
If I use:
echo gmstrftime('%s');
I get: Sat Mar 17 2012 20:04:30 GMT+0000 (WET).
Can anyone please help me out?
Upvotes: 31
Views: 107884
Reputation: 7084
You could also just leave the PHP code as it is and parse the date using JavaScript:
var date = new Date(Date.parse(DATE));
Then even things like this would work:
new Date(Date.parse('11 March 2017'));
Which outputs via a console log (GMT+1000 is because I am in Australia):
Sat Mar 11 2017 00:00:00 GMT+1000
More information about Date.parse()
is here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/parse
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 379
Here is an example with the DateTime object:
$serverDate = new \DateTime('NOW');
// If you want to set a different time zone
// $serverDate = new \DateTime('NOW', new \DateTimeZone('Australia/Perth'));
echo $serverDate->format(DATE_ATOM);
$.get('time.php', function(data) {
var serverDate = new Date(data);
});
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 703
There might be better solutions, but this one did the trick for me. The key issue is that JavaScript uses months 0-11, while PHP uses 1-12 as mentioned previously.
function convert_date_php_js($date) {
$converted_date = date("Y", strtotime($date)) . ', ' .
(date("n", strtotime($date))-1) . ', ' .
date("j", strtotime($date));
return $converted_date;
}
$priceDate = "2016-09-14";
$d = convert_date_php_js($priceDate);
// Returns 2016, 8, 14
Upvotes: 2
Reputation:
date('D M d Y H:i:s O')
It won't work if your current locale isn't English.
A better alternative is to use:
new Date(<? echo date("Y, n - 1, d, H, i, s") ?>)
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 2174
A good way is timestamp:
echo $data = time()*1000;
echo '
<div id="setxDatetime">The current server time is: </div>
<script type="text/javascript">
var x = document.getElementById("setxDatetime");
x.innerHTML = x.innerHTML + new Date(' . $data . ');
</script>
';
1381324693000
The current server time is: Wed Oct 09 2013 16:18:13 GMT+0300 (GTB Standard Time)
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 905
The PHP code in Luna's answer with echo date
isn't exactly like JavaScript code. This will mimic the JavaScript code exactly:
echo date('D M d Y H:i:s O');
Upvotes: 61
Reputation: 1488
$.get('time.php', function(data) {
today = new Date(data);
closing = new Date(data);
});
What was the purpose of multiplying the string by 1000? That operation doesn't make sense.
This PHP will work for that.
echo date('D, d M y H:i:s')." +0000";
Upvotes: 10