Can use DatePeriod:
$firstMondayThisWeek= new DateTime('2011/06/01');
$firstMondayThisWeek->modify('tomorrow');
$firstMondayThisWeek->modify('last Monday');
$nextFiveWeekDays = new DatePeriod(
$firstMondayThisWeek,
DateInterval::createFromDateString('+1 weekdays'),
4
);
print_r(iterator_to_array($nextFiveWeekDays));
Note that DatePeriod
is an Iterator
, so unless you are really fixed on having the dates in an array, you can just as well go with the DatePeriod
as container.
The above will give something like (demo)
Array
(
[0] => DateTime Object
(
[date] => 2011-05-30 00:00:00
[timezone_type] => 3
[timezone] => Europe/Berlin
)
[1] => DateTime Object
(
[date] => 2011-05-31 00:00:00
[timezone_type] => 3
[timezone] => Europe/Berlin
)
[2] => DateTime Object
(
[date] => 2011-06-01 00:00:00
[timezone_type] => 3
[timezone] => Europe/Berlin
)
[3] => DateTime Object
(
[date] => 2011-06-02 00:00:00
[timezone_type] => 3
[timezone] => Europe/Berlin
)
[4] => DateTime Object
(
[date] => 2011-06-03 00:00:00
[timezone_type] => 3
[timezone] => Europe/Berlin
)
)
One pre-5.3 solution to do that would be
$firstMondayInWeek = strtotime('last Monday', strtotime('2011/06/01 +1 day'));
$nextFiveWeekDays = array();
for ($days = 1; $days <= 5; $days++) {
$nextFiveWeekDays[] = new DateTime(
date('Y-m-d', strtotime("+$days weekdays", $firstMondayInWeek))
);
}
though I really dont see why you would want to use DateTime objects for this when you dont/cannot also use their API in your project. As you can see, this is all the old date functions with DateTime just being the container.
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