probably, what you tried is the most elegant way. But, you got me: "mathematically" I did *this* for you:
<?php $res['day'] = date("d"); $res['month'] = date("m"); $res['year'] = date("Y"); $res['dayN'] = date("w"); $res['sunday'] = mktime (0, 0, 0, $res['month'], ($res['day'] - $res['dayN']), $res['year']); $res['saturday'] = mktime (0, 0, 0, $res['month'], ($res['day'] + 6 - $res['dayN']), $res['year']); $res['sunday_debug'] = date("r", $res['sunday']); $res['saturday_debug'] = date("r", $res['saturday']); echo "<pre>\n"; print_r($res); ?> Cheers, and thank my curiousity :) -- Maxim Maletsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Noodle Snacks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote... : > I want to get the unix timestamps of the first and last days of this week... > > Currently I have this: > > echo 'Words for the week from '.date('jS F Y',strtotime("last sunday")).' > to '.date('jS F Y',strtotime ("next saturday")).'.<br>'; > > on saturday this showed the 10th to 23rd... Is there a good way to do this > mathematically (for speed) or can someone think of a better string to parse? > > > -- > JJ Harrison > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > -- > PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) > To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php > -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php