Adding 30 minutes to time formatted as H:i in PHP

徘徊边缘 提交于 2019-11-26 18:48:35
$time = strtotime('10:00');
$startTime = date("H:i", strtotime('-30 minutes', $time));
$endTime = date("H:i", strtotime('+30 minutes', $time));

In order for that to work $time has to be a timestamp. You cannot pass in "10:00" or something like $time = date('H:i', '10:00'); which is what you seem to do, because then I get 0:30 and 1:30 as results too.

Try

$time = strtotime('10:00');

As an alternative, consider using DateTime (the below requires PHP 5.3 though):

$dt = DateTime::createFromFormat('H:i', '10:00'); // create today 10 o'clock
$dt->sub(new DateInterval('PT30M'));              // substract 30 minutes
echo $dt->format('H:i');                          // echo modified time
$dt->add(new DateInterval('PT1H'));               // add 1 hour
echo $dt->format('H:i');                          // echo modified time

or procedural if you don't like OOP

$dateTime = date_create_from_format('H:i', '10:00');
date_sub($dateTime, date_interval_create_from_date_string('30 minutes'));
echo date_format($dateTime, 'H:i');
date_add($dateTime, date_interval_create_from_date_string('1 hour'));
echo date_format($dateTime, 'H:i');
Hans

I usually take a slightly different tack:

$startTime = date("H:i",time() - 1800);
$endTime = date("H:i",time() + 1800);

Where 1800 seconds = 30 minutes.

Your current solution does not work because $time is a string - it needs to be a Unix timestamp. You can do this instead:

$unix_time = strtotime('January 1 2010 '.$time); // create a unix timestamp
$startTime date( "H:i", strtotime('-30 minutes', $unix_time) );
$endTime date( "H:i", strtotime('+30 minutes', $unix_time) );
$time = 30 * 60; //30 minutes
$start_time = date('Y-m-d h:i:s', time() - $time);
$end_time = date('Y-m-d h:i:s', time() + $time);
echo date( "Y-m-d H:i:s", strtotime("2016-10-10 15:00:00")+(60*30) );//2016-10-10 15:30:00

or

echo date( "H:i:s", strtotime("15:00:00")+(60*30) ); // 15:30:00

or

echo date( "H:i:s", strtotime(date("H:i:s"))+(60*30) ); // 15:30:00

Just to expand on previous answers, a function to do this could work like this (changing the time and interval formats however you like them according to this for function.date, and this for DateInterval):

// Return adjusted start and end times as an array.

function expandTimeByMinutes( $time, $beforeMinutes, $afterMinutes ) {

    $time = DateTime::createFromFormat( 'H:i', $time );
    $time->sub( new DateInterval( 'PT' . ( (integer) $beforeMinutes ) . 'M' ) );
    $startTime = $time->format( 'H:i' );
    $time->add( new DateInterval( 'PT' . ( (integer) $beforeMinutes + (integer) $afterMinutes ) . 'M' ) );
    $endTime = $time->format( 'H:i' );

    return [
        'startTime' => $startTime,
        'endTime'   => $endTime,
    ];
}

$adjustedStartEndTime = expandTimeByMinutes( '10:00', 30, 30 );

echo '<h1>Adjusted Start Time: ' . $adjustedStartEndTime['startTime'] . '</h1>' . PHP_EOL . PHP_EOL;
echo '<h1>Adjusted End Time: '   . $adjustedStartEndTime['endTime']   . '</h1>' . PHP_EOL . PHP_EOL;
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