How do I find the unix timestamp for the start of the next day in php?

zeckdude picture zeckdude · Mar 26, 2010 · Viewed 24.1k times · Source

I have a unix timestamp for the current time. I want to get the unix timestamp for the start of the next day.

$current_timestamp = time();
$allowable_start_date = strtotime('+1 day', $current_timestamp);

As I am doing it now, I am simply adding 1 whole entire day to the unix timestamp, when instead I would like to figure out how many seconds are left in this current day, and only add that many seconds in order to get the unix timestamp for the very first minute of the next day.

What is the best way to go about this?

Answer

deceze picture deceze · Mar 26, 2010

The most straightforward way to simply "make" that time:

$tomorrowMidnight = mktime(0, 0, 0, date('n'), date('j') + 1);

Quote:

I would like to figure out how many seconds are left in this current day, and only add that many seconds in order to get the unix timestamp for the very first minute of the next day.

Don't do it like that. Avoid relative calculations whenever possible, especially if it's so trivial to "absolutely" get the timestamp without seconds arithmetics.