PHP 8.4.0 RC4 available for testing

DateTimeImmutable::setTime

(PHP 5 >= 5.5.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)

DateTimeImmutable::setTimeSets the time

Descrizione

public DateTimeImmutable::setTime(
    int $hour,
    int $minute,
    int $second = 0,
    int $microsecond = 0
): DateTimeImmutable

Returns a new DateTimeImmutable object with the time set to the given time.

Elenco dei parametri

hour

Hour of the time.

minute

Minute of the time.

second

Second of the time.

microsecond

Microsecond of the time.

Valori restituiti

Returns a new DateTimeImmutable object with the modified data.

Log delle modifiche

Versione Descrizione
8.1.0 The behaviour with double existing hours (during the fall-back DST transition) changed. Previously PHP would pick the second occurrence (after the DST transition), instead of the first occurrence (before DST transition).
7.1.0 The microsecond parameter was added.

Esempi

Example #1 DateTimeImmutable::setTime() example

Stile orientato agli oggetti

<?php
$date
= new DateTimeImmutable('2001-01-01');

$newDate = $date->setTime(14, 55);
echo
$newDate->format('Y-m-d H:i:s') . "\n";

$newDate = $date->setTime(14, 55, 24);
echo
$newDate->format('Y-m-d H:i:s') . "\n";
?>

The above examples will output something similar to:

2001-01-01 14:55:00
2001-01-01 14:55:24

Example #2 Values exceeding ranges are added to their parent values

<?php
$date
= new DateTimeImmutable('2001-01-01');

$newDate = $date->setTime(14, 55, 24);
echo
$newDate->format('Y-m-d H:i:s') . "\n";

$newDate = $date->setTime(14, 55, 65);
echo
$newDate->format('Y-m-d H:i:s') . "\n";

$newDate = $date->setTime(14, 65, 24);
echo
$newDate->format('Y-m-d H:i:s') . "\n";

$newDate = $date->setTime(25, 55, 24);
echo
$newDate->format('Y-m-d H:i:s') . "\n";
?>

Il precedente esempio visualizzerà:

2001-01-01 14:55:24
2001-01-01 14:56:05
2001-01-01 15:05:24
2001-01-02 01:55:24

Vedere anche:

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