getPreference($time_key)); } function phabricator_datetime($epoch, $user) { $time_key = PhabricatorUserPreferences::PREFERENCE_TIME_FORMAT; return phabricator_format_local_time( $epoch, $user, pht('%s, %s', phutil_date_format($epoch), $user->getPreference($time_key))); } /** * This function does not usually need to be called directly. Instead, call * @{function:phabricator_date}, @{function:phabricator_time}, or * @{function:phabricator_datetime}. * * @param int Unix epoch timestamp. * @param PhabricatorUser User viewing the timestamp. * @param string Date format, as per DateTime class. * @return string Formatted, local date/time. */ function phabricator_format_local_time($epoch, $user, $format) { if (!$epoch) { // If we're missing date information for something, the DateTime class will // throw an exception when we try to construct an object. Since this is a // display function, just return an empty string. return ''; } $user_zone = $user->getTimezoneIdentifier(); static $zones = array(); if (empty($zones[$user_zone])) { $zones[$user_zone] = new DateTimeZone($user_zone); } $zone = $zones[$user_zone]; // NOTE: Although DateTime takes a second DateTimeZone parameter to its // constructor, it ignores it if the date string includes timezone // information. Further, it treats epoch timestamps ("@946684800") as having // a UTC timezone. Set the timezone explicitly after constructing the object. try { $date = new DateTime('@'.$epoch); } catch (Exception $ex) { // NOTE: DateTime throws an empty exception if the format is invalid, // just replace it with a useful one. throw new Exception( pht("Construction of a DateTime() with epoch '%s' ". "raised an exception.", $epoch)); } $date->setTimeZone($zone); return PhutilTranslator::getInstance()->translateDate($format, $date); }