05-10-2007
Its rapidly approaching 40 years since I wrote my first program, in Basic, in 1969.
Anybody remember cobol, fortran, snobol, rpgII, univac 1100, IBM S34,... me neither.
7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I can write a script to use ps and interigate the output, but is there a command that works similar to the find command for files where I can request a list of all the running processes over 1 day old ?
thanks! (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: MizzGail
8 Replies
2. What is on Your Mind?
What is your age? (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: royal
15 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys,
I hope one of you has already done this and is kind enough to share your script with me.
I have a Solaris8 server that uses password aging for its local user accounts. I need a script that checks the age of the password and then sends the user an email if the password is about to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tornado
3 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
How can I count the age of the file (e.g. in minutes)? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jarmo.leppanen
4 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I'm using SunOS.
need to find age of the file in terms of seconds. The file
name with its path will be given to the script as input.
Any kinda help will be appreciated.
Thanks in advance (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: bankimmehta
7 Replies
6. AIX
hi ,
After i installed the visual age c++ its got installed but am not able to find the bin directory in the /usr/vacpp.am i need to install the some fileset ???? please help me.version is 7
mak (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: senmak
1 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All..
Is there any easy way to find out how many days older is file?
for ex. fileA 20 days
fileB 10 days
I am currently on AIX, and there is no STAT command available in this environment. What are my options?
Thanks
Abhijeet R (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: freakabhi
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
datefmt_localtime
DATEFMT_LOCALTIME(3) 1 DATEFMT_LOCALTIME(3)
IntlDateFormatter::localtime - Parse string to a field-based time value
Object oriented style
SYNOPSIS
public array IntlDateFormatter::localtime (string $value, [int &$position])
DESCRIPTION
Procedural style
array datefmt_localtime (IntlDateFormatter $fmt, string $value, [int &$position])
Converts string $value to a field-based time value ( an array of various fields), starting at $parse_pos and consuming as much of the
input value as possible.
PARAMETERS
o $fmt
- The formatter resource
o $value
- string to convert to a time
o $position
- Position at which to start the parsing in $value (zero-based). If no error occurs before $value is consumed, $parse_pos will
contain -1 otherwise it will contain the position at which parsing ended . If $parse_pos > strlen($value), the parse fails immedi-
ately.
RETURN VALUES
Localtime compatible array of integers : contains 24 hour clock value in tm_hour field
EXAMPLES
Example #1
datefmt_localtime(3) example
<?php
$fmt = datefmt_create(
'en_US',
IntlDateFormatter::FULL,
IntlDateFormatter::FULL,
'America/Los_Angeles',
IntlDateFormatter::GREGORIAN
);
$arr = datefmt_localtime($fmt, 'Wednesday, December 31, 1969 4:00:00 PM PT', 0);
echo 'First parsed output is ';
if ($arr) {
foreach ($arr as $key => $value) {
echo "$key : $value , ";
}
}
?>
Example #2
OO example
<?php
$fmt = new IntlDateFormatter(
'en_US',
IntlDateFormatter::FULL,
IntlDateFormatter::FULL,
'America/Los_Angeles',
IntlDateFormatter::GREGORIAN
);
$arr = $fmt->localtime('Wednesday, December 31, 1969 4:00:00 PM PT', 0);
echo 'First parsed output is ';
if ($arr) {
foreach ($arr as $key => $value) {
echo "$key : $value , ";
}
}
?>
The above example will output:
First parsed output is tm_sec : 0 , tm_min : 0 , tm_hour : 16 , tm_year : 1969 ,
tm_mday : 31 , tm_wday : 4 , tm_yday : 365 , tm_mon : 11 , tm_isdst : 0 ,
SEE ALSO
datefmt_create(3), datefmt_format(3), datefmt_parse(3), datefmt_get_error_code(3), datefmt_get_error_message(3).
PHP Documentation Group DATEFMT_LOCALTIME(3)