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php version of mysql's str_to_date()

I've come across this in my companies code base, and I'd like to change it to something that doesn't connect to mysql just to just a function:

$sql = "select date_format(str_to_date('$date','$format'),'%Y-%m-%d') startDate ";
$result = mysql_query($sql);
...

Our production env is of the unix variety, as is my dev environment, but some people write code on a windows environment, so strptime() isn't an option.

I've seen similar questions floating around SO, but none with an answer that fits my needs. Is there a simple, or common way to extract dates from strings using a variable format?

The reason the date formats can vary so much is because we're parsing file names from vendors, so we have to be able to开发者_如何学JAVA handle yyyymmdd, mmddyyyy, ddmmyyyy, ddmonyyyy, etc, etc.


The short answer is that there is no way to automatically parse arbitrary date formats that will correctly parse all formats out there. In your own example formats, there is just no way to know which numbers are for which date increments.

You can look at the accepted formats of strtotime() and if all your vendors use formats recognized by it, then you are in luck. But if not, the best you can really do is create a lookup table of "vendor" => "format" and then you can use date_parse_from_format()

edit: *based on comment below, here is a php4 version of an approximation of date_parse_from_format() that should suit your needs*

function date_parse_from_format($format, $date) {
  $dMask = array('H'=>'hour','i'=>'minute','s'=>'second','y'=>'year','m'=>'month','d'=>'day');
  $format = preg_split('//', $format, -1, PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);  
  $date = preg_split('//', $date, -1, PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);  
  foreach ($date as $k => $v) {
    if ($dMask[$format[$k]]) $dt[$dMask[$format[$k]]] .= $v;
  }
  return $dt;
}

Basically you need to have a lookup table of vendor => format where format is a mask of what each character in the date string represents.

NOTE: The masks used for each date/time increments do NOT exactly reflect what is used in php's normal date() string format. It is simplified and meant to mask each individual character of your custom string.

Example:

/*
  lookup table for vendors
  for EVERY character you want to count as a date/time 
  increment you must use the following masks:
  hour   : H
  minute : i
  second : s
  year   : y
  month  : m
  day    : d
*/
$vendorDateFormats = array(
  'vendor1' => 'yyyymmdd',
  'vendor2' => 'mmddyyyy',
  'vendor3' => 'ddmmyyyy',
  'vendor4' => 'yyyy.mm.dd HH:ii:ss'
);

// example 1:
echo "<pre>";
print_r(date_parse_from_format($vendorDateFormats['vendor2'],'03232011'));

// example 2:
echo "<pre>";
print_r(date_parse_from_format($vendorDateFormats['vendor4'],'2011.03.23 12:03:00'));

output:

Array
(
    [month] => 03
    [day] => 23
    [year] => 2011
)

Array
(
    [year] => 2011
    [month] => 03
    [day] => 23
    [hour] => 12
    [minute] => 03
    [second] => 00
)


There is the PHP function strtotime() PHP Ref which converts most strings which are a time (including things like "next Thursday") into timestamps, but even it can be somewhat confused when dealing with European and American date structures ("dd/mm/yyyy" versus "mm/dd/yyyy").

You can test it out (without writing a test script) at http://www.functions-online.com/strtotime.html

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