change the date format in laravel view page

PhpLaravelDate

Php Problem Overview


I want to change the date format which is fetched from database. now I got 2016-10-01{{$user->from_date}} .I want to change the format 'd-m-y' in laravel 5.3

{{ $user->from_date->format('d/m/Y')}}

Php Solutions


Solution 1 - Php

Try this:

date('d-m-Y', strtotime($user->from_date));

It will convert date into d-m-Y or whatever format you have given.

Note: This solution is a general solution that works for php and any of its frameworks. For a Laravel specific method, try the solution provided by Hamelraj.

Solution 2 - Php

In Laravel use Carbon its good

{{ \Carbon\Carbon::parse($user->from_date)->format('d/m/Y')}}

Solution 3 - Php

In your Model set:

protected $dates = ['name_field'];

after in your view :

{{ $user->from_date->format('d/m/Y') }}

works

Solution 4 - Php

You can check Date Mutators: https://laravel.com/docs/5.3/eloquent-mutators#date-mutators

You need set in your User model column from_date in $dates array and then you can change format in $dateFormat

The another option is also put this method to your User model:

public function getFromDateAttribute($value) {
    return \Carbon\Carbon::parse($value)->format('d-m-Y');
}

and then in view if you run {{ $user->from_date }} you will be see format that you want.

Solution 5 - Php

There are 3 ways that you can do:

  1. Using Laravel Model

    $user = \App\User::find(1);

    $newDateFormat = $user->created_at->format('d/m/Y');

    dd($newDateFormat);

  2. Using PHP strtotime

    $user = \App\User::find(1);

    $newDateFormat2 = date('d/m/Y', strtotime($user->created_at));

    dd($newDateFormat2);

  3. Using Carbon

    $user = \App\User::find(1);

    $newDateFormat3 = \Carbon\Carbon::parse($user->created_at)->format('d/m/Y');

    dd($newDateFormat3);

Solution 6 - Php

Method One:

Using the strtotime() to time is the best format to change the date to the given format.

strtotime() - Parse about any English textual datetime description into a Unix timestamp

The function expects to be given a string containing an English date format and will try to parse that format into a Unix timestamp (the number of seconds since January 1 1970 00:00:00 UTC), relative to the timestamp given in now, or the current time if now is not supplied.

Example:

<?php
$timestamp = strtotime( "February 26, 2007" );  
print date('Y-m-d', $timestamp );
?>

Output:

2007-02-26

Method Two:

date_format() - Return a new DateTime object, and then format the date:

<?php
$date=date_create("2013-03-15");
echo date_format($date,"Y/m/d H:i:s");
?>

Output:

 2013/03/15 00:00:00 

Solution 7 - Php

You can use Carbon::createFromTimestamp

BLADE

{{ \Carbon\Carbon::createFromTimestamp(strtotime($user->from_date))->format('d-m-Y')}}

Solution 8 - Php

I had a similar problem, I wanted to change the format, but I also wanted the flexibility of being able to change the format in the blade template engine too.

I, therefore, set my model up as the following:

<?php

namespace App;

use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;

\Carbon\Carbon::setToStringFormat('d-m-Y');

class User extends Model
{
    protected $dates = [
        'from_date',
    ];
}

The setToStringFormat will set all the dates to use this format for this model.
The advantage of this for me is that I could have the format that I wanted without the mutator, because with the mutator, the attribute is returned as a string meaning that in the blade template I would have to write something like this if I wanted to change the format in the template:

{{ date('Y', strtotime($user->from_date)) }}

Which isn't very clean.

Instead, the attribute is still returned as a Carbon instance, however it is first returned in the desired format.
That means that in the template I could write the following, cleaner, code:

{{ $user->from_date->format('Y') }}

In addition to being able to reformat the Carbon instance, I can also call various Carbon methods on the attribute in the template.

There is probably an oversight to this approach; I'm going to wager it is not a good idea to specify the string format at the top of the model in case it affects other scripts. From what I have seen so far, that has not happened. It has only changed the default Carbon for that model only.

In this instance, it might be a good set the Carbon format back to what it was originally at the bottom of the model script. This is a bodged idea, but it would work for each model to have its own format.
Contrary, if you are having the same format for each model then in your AppServiceProvider instead. That would just keep the code neater and easier to maintain.

Solution 9 - Php

I suggest using isoFormat for better appearance on the web pages.

{{ \Carbon\Carbon::parse($blog->created_at)->isoFormat('MMM Do YYYY')}}

The result is

> Jan 21st 2021

Carbon Extension

Solution 10 - Php

In Laravel 8 you can use the Date Casting: https://laravel.com/docs/8.x/eloquent-mutators#date-casting

In your Model just set:

protected $casts = [
    'my_custom_datetime_field' => 'datetime'
];

And then in your blade template you can use the format() method:

{{ $my_custom_datetime_field->format('d. m. Y') }}

Solution 11 - Php

In Laravel you can add a function inside app/Helper/helper.php like

function formatDate($date = '', $format = 'Y-m-d'){
    if($date == '' || $date == null)
        return;

    return date($format,strtotime($date));
}

And call this function on any controller like this

$start_date = formatDate($start_date,'Y-m-d');

Hope it helps!

Solution 12 - Php

Sometimes changing the date format doesn't work properly, especially in Laravel. So in that case, it's better to use:

$date1 = strtr($_REQUEST['date'], '/', '-');
echo date('Y-m-d', strtotime($date1));

Then you can avoid error like "1970-01-01"!

Solution 13 - Php

For a more natural date format used everywhere outside of the US, with time that includes hours, minutes and seconds:

> 07/03/2022 19:00:00

{{ \Carbon\Carbon::parse($transaction->created_at)->format('d/m/Y H:i:s A')}} 

Or if you'd prefer to use a more natural 12-hour-clock-based time format like this:

> 07/03/2022 7:00:00 PM

{{ \Carbon\Carbon::parse($transaction->created_at)->format('d/m/Y g:i:s')}}

Here's the full list of variables available for use in the PHP/Carbon date-time format.

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Solution 1 - PhpMayank PandeyzView Answer on Stackoverflow
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