Re: strtotime('yesterday')

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On Tue, May 24, 2005 7:24 am, Rahul S. Johari said:
> I¹m trying to delete all files in a folder based on a string match with
> the
> following code:
>
> <?
> $dir = '/Library/WebServer/Documents/something.com/subfolder/';
> $dp = opendir($dir) or die ('Fatal Error: '.mysql_error());
> while ($file = readdir($dp)) {
> if ((eregi('.png',$file)) && (filemtime($dir.$file)) <
> (strtotime('yesterday'))) {
> unlink($dir.$file);
> }
> }
> closedir($dp);
> $yesterday = mktime( 0, 0, 0, date("m") , date("d")-1, date("Y") );
> $date = date( "m-d-y, D", $yesterday );
> echo "<B>Erase Successful!</B><br>All images up to $date, have been
> permanently erased from the Server.";
> ?>
>
> I need the code to delete all images created till yesterday, and leave
> images created today. Somehow strtotime(?yesterday¹) doesn¹t work.
> If I put strtotime(?-2 days¹) or strtotime(?-7 days¹) or even
> strtotime(?8:00am¹)... They all work accordingly. How come (?yesterday¹)
> isn¹t working? It doesn¹t delete anything.

Maybe strtotime('-1 day') would work. [shrug]

You could also use http://php.net/mktime

mktime(date('m'), -1); //This should be 24 hours before 'now', I think...

Or maybe mktime(date('m'), date('d) -1);

Whichever it is, PHP's mktime does the right thing even if you use, like:
mktime(6, 0); //This is really May 31st, not June 0. PHP knows.

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