Hi ,
I am working at Unix system,using c lang.
I need c fun which return the day of the week .
For example :
0- Sunday.
1- Monday.
....
10x. (4 Replies)
I need o get yesterday's day of week but im not exactly sure. the actual name is what i want. I can do it with numbers but im not sure with words. (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Our system is running on Solaris 8 and we are using US locale. By default the First Day Of Week is Sunday, is it possible for us to change it to Monday?
I have googled it but found very little of use.
THanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have date in string format 'YYYY-MM-DD'. I want to know day of the week for this date.
Example. For '2005-08-21' my script should return '0' or Sunday
For '2005-08-22' it should return '1' or Monday
I want piece of code for HP-UX korn shell.
Appreciate reply on this. (5 Replies)
Hi all, I am trying to get dow from cal using below script
#! /bin/bash
YEAR=`echo $1 | cut -c 1-4`
MONTH=`echo $1 | cut -c 5-6`
DAY=`echo $1 | cut -c 7-8`
for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
do
dayofweek=`cal $MONTH $YEAR | awk '$i == $DAY {printf("%s","$i")}'`
echo $dayofweek... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I need to know how to derive the day of the week by passing the value in following format:
Feb 28 2010
The output I'm expecting is Sunday or Sun.
I know, I can use the following code to get the day of the week.
date +%a
But I want to pass the value as a string. Please help... (11 Replies)
In HP-UX the date command does not have the "-d" switch like some other *nixes do. I'm working a simple script to tell me, given the day, month and year what day of the week that falls on.
Assuming valid day, month and year input (I'd perform quality checks on the input separately, but not... (5 Replies)
I have been volunteered by my boss to be the sysadmin for our production redhat server. He asked me to tighten the security to avoid mishaps like "rm -f *" that occured not long ago.
Right now, we have 53 users sudo-ing into the machine and it is an audit nightmare. I am wondering if it... (15 Replies)
Hi All,
I have the below requirement ,
if i give the week number for ex 41 i need to get the date for Monday and thursday for this given week. my expected output is 13/10/2014 (Monday's date) and 16/10/2014 (Thursday's date)
I am using GNU LINUX .
Pls help me with your thoughts.
Thanks in... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohanalakshmi
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
time::ctime
Time::CTime(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Time::CTime(3)NAME
Time::CTime -- format times ala POSIX asctime
SYNOPSIS
use Time::CTime
print ctime(time);
print asctime(localtime(time));
print strftime(template, localtime(time));
strftime conversions
%% PERCENT
%a day of the week abbr
%A day of the week
%b month abbr
%B month
%c ctime format: Sat Nov 19 21:05:57 1994
%d DD
%D MM/DD/YY
%e numeric day of the month
%f floating point seconds (milliseconds): .314
%F floating point seconds (microseconds): .314159
%h month abbr
%H hour, 24 hour clock, leading 0's)
%I hour, 12 hour clock, leading 0's)
%j day of the year
%k hour
%l hour, 12 hour clock
%m month number, starting with 1
%M minute, leading 0's
%n NEWLINE
%o ornate day of month -- "1st", "2nd", "25th", etc.
%p AM or PM
%r time format: 09:05:57 PM
%R time format: 21:05
%S seconds, leading 0's
%t TAB
%T time format: 21:05:57
%U week number, Sunday as first day of week
%w day of the week, numerically, Sunday == 0
%W week number, Monday as first day of week
%x date format: 11/19/94
%X time format: 21:05:57
%y year (2 digits)
%Y year (4 digits)
%Z timezone in ascii. eg: PST
DESCRIPTION
This module provides routines to format dates. They correspond to the libc routines. &strftime() supports a pretty good set of coversions
-- more than most C libraries.
strftime supports a pretty good set of conversions.
The POSIX module has very similar functionality. You should consider using it instead if you do not have allergic reactions to system
libraries.
GENESIS
Written by David Muir Sharnoff <muir@idiom.com>.
The starting point for this package was a posting by Paul Foley <paul@ascent.com>
LICENSE
Copyright (C) 1996-1999 David Muir Sharnoff. License hereby granted for anyone to use, modify or redistribute this module at their own
risk. Please feed useful changes back to muir@idiom.com.
perl v5.12.1 2004-02-08 Time::CTime(3)