Sponsored Content
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? How Much Vacation Do You Take Every Year? Post 302207257 by benefactr on Thursday 19th of June 2008 01:03:45 PM
Old 06-19-2008
I get 4 weeks and I take 4 weeks.... Though not all at once.. usually a couple weeks during summer and then during the holidays to visit family..

Last edited by benefactr; 06-19-2008 at 02:13 PM..
 

2 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. What is on Your Mind?

Vacation Announcements

I thought this would be a useful thread to announce vacation periods, so us regulars will be known to be on/off. If another admin thinks this is stupid, go ahead and un-pin it. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: otheus
1 Replies

2. What is on Your Mind?

How Much Vacation Do You Take? | UNIX.com Community | Annual Vacation (YouTube)

Here is another simple YT video co-produced with our video partner. How Much Vacation Do You Take? | UNIX.com Community | Annual Vacation https://youtu.be/MSy553qS654 Background sound track is called "Caribbean Paradise" Sounds like something wisecracker would have played in one... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies
timetrans(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					    timetrans(3pm)

NAME
Net::DNS::SEC::Tools::timetrans - Convert an integer seconds count into text units. SYNOPSIS
use Net::DNS::SEC::Tools::timetrans; $timestring = timetrans(86488); $timestring = fuzzytimetrans(86488); DESCRIPTION
The timetrans() interface in Net::DNS::SEC::Tools::timetrans converts an integer seconds count into the equivalent number of days, hours, and minutes. The time converted is a relative time, not an absolute time. The returned time is given in terms of days, hours, minutes, and seconds, as required to express the seconds count appropriately. The fuzzytimetrans() interface converts an integer seconds count into the equivalent number of weeks or days or hours or minutes. The unit chosen is that which is most natural for the seconds count. One decimal place of precision is included in the result. INTERFACES
The interfaces to the Net::DNS::SEC::Tools::timetrans module are given below. timetrans() This routine converts an integer seconds count into the equivalent number of days, hours, and minutes. This converted seconds count is returned as a text string. The seconds count must be greater than zero or an error will be returned. Return Values: If a valid seconds count was given, the count converted into the appropriate text string will be returned. An empty string is returned if no seconds count was given or if the seconds count is less than one. fuzzytimetrans() This routine converts an integer seconds count into the equivalent number of weeks, days, hours, or minutes. This converted seconds count is returned as a text string. The seconds count must be greater than zero or an error will be returned. Return Values: If a valid seconds count was given, the count converted into the appropriate text string will be returned. An empty string is returned if no seconds count was given or if the seconds count is less than one. EXAMPLES
timetrans(400) returns 6 minutes, 40 seconds timetrans(420) returns 7 minutes timetrans(888) returns 14 minutes, 48 seconds timetrans(86400) returns 1 day timetrans(86488) returns 1 day, 28 seconds timetrans(715000) returns 8 days, 6 hours, 36 minutes, 40 second timetrans(720000) returns 8 days, 8 hours fuzzytimetrans(400) returns 6.7 minutes fuzzytimetrans(420) returns 7.0 minutes fuzzytimetrans(888) returns 14.8 minutes fuzzytimetrans(86400) returns 1.0 day fuzzytimetrans(86488) returns 1.0 day fuzzytimetrans(715000) returns 1.2 weeks fuzzytimetrans(720000) returns 1.2 weeks COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2004-2012 SPARTA, Inc. All rights reserved. See the COPYING file included with the DNSSEC-Tools package for details. AUTHOR
Wayne Morrison, tewok@tislabs.com SEE ALSO
timetrans(1) perl v5.14.2 2012-06-18 timetrans(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:34 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy