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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Where did you meet UNIX for a first time? Post 302490945 by dsw on Wednesday 26th of January 2011 08:39:26 AM
Old 01-26-2011
It was 1996 and I was 15 & lucky to have the UK's compulsory 2-week Work Experience in a London Hospital.

Introduced by an elderly bofh to Solaris 2.5 on a Sparc Server 20. Awesome experience.

I was given the Jewell CD set of InfoMagic Linux Developers Resource, April 96 edition. Commence bedroom tinkering with Slackware and redhat for a couple of years and then FreeBSD for about 6 years, heading back to Linux since.

Professionally, it's mostly been Solaris, Linux and AIX with a few forays into Tru64, HP-UX, etc..

But i'll never forget that elderly bofh and his inane random noises and twitching, cordrouy trousers, knitted jump and the stench of Nescafe. What a guy.
 

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TIME(2) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   TIME(2)

NAME
time - get time in seconds SYNOPSIS
#include <time.h> time_t time(time_t *t); DESCRIPTION
time() returns the time as the number of seconds since the Epoch, 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 (UTC). If t is non-NULL, the return value is also stored in the memory pointed to by t. RETURN VALUE
On success, the value of time in seconds since the Epoch is returned. On error, ((time_t) -1) is returned, and errno is set appropriately. ERRORS
EFAULT t points outside your accessible address space. CONFORMING TO
SVr4, 4.3BSD, C89, C99, POSIX.1-2001. POSIX does not specify any error conditions. NOTES
POSIX.1 defines seconds since the Epoch using a formula that approximates the number of seconds between a specified time and the Epoch. This formula takes account of the facts that all years that are evenly divisible by 4 are leap years, but years that are evenly divisible by 100 are not leap years unless they are also evenly divisible by 400, in which case they are leap years. This value is not the same as the actual number of seconds between the time and the Epoch, because of leap seconds and because system clocks are not required to be syn- chronized to a standard reference. The intention is that the interpretation of seconds since the Epoch values be consistent; see POSIX.1-2008 Rationale A.4.15 for further rationale. SEE ALSO
date(1), gettimeofday(2), ctime(3), ftime(3), time(7) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2011-09-09 TIME(2)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:35 AM.
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