Using the DateTime
class, if I try to run the following code:
$mydate = new DateTime();
echo $mydate->date;
I\'ll get back
If you just use a var_Dump before ask the property date everything works allright:
$mydate = new DateTime();
var_Dump($mydate);
echo '<br>';
echo $mydate->date;
This delivers:
object(DateTime)#1 (3) { ["date"]=> string(26) "2017-04-11 08:44:54.000000" ["timezone_type"]=> int(3) ["timezone"]=> string(16) "America/New_York" }
2017-04-11 08:44:54.000000
So you see the property date exists even for the object. I can't understand this behaviour. Just comment out the var_Dump and you will get the error again.
The date property of DateTime is protected.
You can display the date with format function.
<?php
try {
$time = new DateTime();
echo($time->format("Y-m-d H:i:s"));
} catch (Exception $e) {
}
Or you can convert to array:
<?php
try {
$time = (array) new DateTime();
var_dump($time["date"]);
} catch (Exception $e) {
}
As noted by the other answers, it is an issue with PHP which is unresolved as of today but if it is a 'side effect' of var_dump()
I am not so sure..
echo ((array) new DateTime())['date']; // Works in PHP 7.
What I am sure about is that if the properties of DateTime
where meant to be used by us it would have been made available. But like many internal classes they are not and you shouldn't rely on "hacky" or "glitchy" methods to fix your code. Instead you should use their API.
echo (new DateTime())->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');
If you are not satisfied you can extend the class or perhaps use Carbon that extends it for you.
echo (new Carbon())->toDateTimeString();
If you wounder how var_dump()
creates a fake output of an object take a look at __debugInfo()
This is a known issue.
Date being available is actually a side-effect of support for
var_dump()
here – derick@php.net
For some reason, you're not supposed to be able to access the property but var_dump
shows it anyways. If you really want to get the date in that format, use the DateTime::format() function.
echo $mydate->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');
Besides calling DateTime::format()
you can access the property using reflection:
<?php
$dt = new DateTime();
$o = new ReflectionObject($dt);
$p = $o->getProperty('date');
$date = $p->getValue($dt);
This is slight faster than using format()
because format()
formats a timestring that has already been formatted. Especially if you do it many times in a loop.
However this is not a regular behaviour of PHP. A bugreport has already been filed as @Nile mentioned in the comments above.