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Get Time Ticks in PHP

Tags:

php

microtime

Consider this line of code in C#

ordernumber.Value = DateTime.Now.Ticks.ToString();

How to get same ordernumber.Value in PHP

$ordernumberValue = microtime(); //?

I try to this

echo microtime(true) * 10000000;

But get result string.length was difference. short length than C#.

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user1859327 Avatar asked Jun 13 '15 10:06

user1859327


3 Answers

From .NET documentation:

DateTime.Ticks Property

The value of this property represents the number of 100-nanosecond intervals that have elapsed since 12:00:00 midnight, January 1, 0001 (0:00:00 UTC on January 1, 0001, in the Gregorian calendar), which represents DateTime.MinValue. It does not include the number of ticks that are attributable to leap seconds.

In PHP this is implemented simply as time():

time

Returns the current time measured in the number of seconds since the Unix Epoch (January 1 1970 00:00:00 GMT).

microtime() similarly returns time in seconds and microseconds after decimal point, so it has greater precision. For some archaic reasons, the default value is a string, but if you pass true as first argument, you'll get a nice float:

rr-@burza:~$ php -r 'echo microtime(true);'
1434193280.3929%    

So all you have to do is to scale the value returned by either time() or microtime() by a constant factor.

According to Wikipedia, a nanosecond is equal to 1000 picoseconds or 1⁄1000 microsecond, or 1/1000000000 second. So 100 nanoseconds would mean 100/1000000000 microseconds, i.e. one .NET tick = 1/10000000 second, i.e. one second = 10000000 .NET ticks. Thus you need to multiply value returned by time() or microtime() by 10000000 like this:

microtime(true) * 10000000
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rr- Avatar answered Nov 10 '22 00:11

rr-


One tick is 1/10000000 of second.

This code converts current microtime to "ticks" count:

list($usec, $sec) = explode(" ", microtime());
$ticks = (int)($sec*10000000+$usec*10000000);
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umka Avatar answered Nov 09 '22 23:11

umka


I am not sure if this is what you are looking :-

$mt = microtime(true);

$mt =  $mt*1000; //microsecs
$ticks = (string)$mt*10; //100 Nanosecs
echo $ticks; //14341946614384

Now the major difference is Ticks is 100-Nanoseconds since 12:00:00 midnight, January 1, 0001 while this will produce 100-Nanoseconds since January 1 1970

like image 1
Samosa Avatar answered Nov 10 '22 00:11

Samosa