HTTP Cookies (example: Monday, 15-Aug-2005 15:52:01 UTC)
DateTime::ISO8601
DATE_ISO8601
ISO-8601 (example: 2005-08-15T15:52:01+0000)
Note:
This format is not compatible with ISO-8601, but is left this way for
backward compatibility reasons. Use DateTime::ATOM
or DATE_ATOM for compatibility with ISO-8601
instead.
DateTime::RFC822
DATE_RFC822
RFC 822 (example: Mon, 15 Aug 05 15:52:01 +0000)
DateTime::RFC850
DATE_RFC850
RFC 850 (example: Monday, 15-Aug-05 15:52:01 UTC)
DateTime::RFC1036
DATE_RFC1036
RFC 1036 (example: Mon, 15 Aug 05 15:52:01 +0000)
DateTime::RFC1123
DATE_RFC1123
RFC 1123 (example: Mon, 15 Aug 2005 15:52:01 +0000)
DateTime::RFC2822
DATE_RFC2822
RFC 2822 (example: Mon, 15 Aug 2005 15:52:01 +0000)
DateTime::RFC3339
DATE_RFC3339
Same as DATE_ATOM (since PHP 5.1.3)
DateTime::RSS
DATE_RSS
RSS (example: Mon, 15 Aug 2005 15:52:01 +0000)
DateTime::W3C
DATE_W3C
World Wide Web Consortium (example: 2005-08-15T15:52:01+00:00)
The COOKIE constant was changed to reflect RFC 1036 using a four digit
year rather than a two digit year (RFC 850) as prior versions.
5.2.2
DateTime object comparison with the
comparison operators
changed to work as expected. Previously, all DateTime objects were
considered equal (using ==).
Table of Contents
DateTime::add — Adds an amount of days, months, years, hours, minutes and seconds to a
DateTime object