Seriously.... If your apps are still being used in 2038 ... WOW!

This is an issue that will more then likely be well resolved LONG before
2038... 


On 5/6/08 10:50 PM, "Nathan Nobbe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Tue, May 6, 2008 at 10:57 PM, Paul Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
>> 
>> On Wed, 2008-05-07 at 10:03 +0530, Chetan Rane wrote:
>>> Have guys heard of the the Y2K38 Bug more details are on this link
>>> 
>> 
>> Nope, but I can guess what its about.
>> 
>>> Can there be a possible solution. As the system which I am developing
>>> for my client uses Unix timestamp.
>>> 
>> 
>> There are probably multiple solutions. AFAIK time is a 32 bit signed
>> int, making it unsigned would add like 100 years onto your app.
>> 
>>> This might effect my application in the future
>>> 
>> 
>> If your app survives that long! Why not just maintain it and when times
>> change, your app changes? :)
>> 
>> Seriously, this is really not a big deal!
> 
> 
> true-that ;)
> anyway, the DateTime class is implemented as a 64-bit unsigned (i think)
> value.  so if you use it you should be good to go.
> 
> php > echo date_create('2040-10-24')->format('M-d-Y');
> Oct-24-2040
> 
> -nathan

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