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Full Discussion: General Purpose Date Script
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers General Purpose Date Script Post 302868049 by Corona688 on Friday 25th of October 2013 05:33:57 PM
Old 10-25-2013
Bug noted, thank you a lot, I had --date "something" when I should have done --date="something".

Thanks for reminding me about the +syntax feature, which I'd planned but forgotten.

Date math is not hard here, I am letting mktime handle absolutely everything tricky. I do not need to know when the next leap year is, I subtract 1 from the 'year' value and let mktime decide what that is.

Yes yes I know that Perl has about 37 different date modules I could be using. But if I'm going to tell someone to install 'Perl::MyFavoriteDateModule' I might as well just tell them to install GNU date. The whole point is to not do that, (and to show elegant Perl code is possible without including the kitchen sink).

Some of those tests are just weird though. I have no idea how you got 23 hours from subtracting days, it certainly doesn't happen here. I may have done something odd with a last-minute fix when I posted. [edit] Now I know. It happened because of the --date vs --date= problem. Perl does strange things when you do arithmetic on strings.

Anyway, I'll incorporate your suggestions and repost. Thanks again. [edit] Version 2 is now in the OP.

Last edited by Corona688; 10-25-2013 at 06:57 PM..
 

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DATE(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   DATE(1)

NAME
date - print or set the date and time SYNOPSIS
date [-qsu] [[MMDDYY]hhmm[ss]] [+format] OPTIONS
-q Read the date from stdin -s Set the time (implicit for -q or a date string) -u Print the date as GMT -t Use this number of seconds instead of current time EXAMPLES
date # Print the date and time date 0221921610 # Set date to Feb 21, 1992 at 4:10 p.m. DESCRIPTION
With the -q flag or a numeric argument, date sets the GMT time and date. MMDDYY refers to the month, day, and year; hhmmss refers to the hour, minute and second. Each of the six fields must be exactly two digits, no more and no less. date always display the date and time, with the default format for the system. The -u flag request GMT time instead of local time. A format may be specified with a + followed by a printf-like string with the following options: %% % character %A Name of the day %B Name of the month %D mm/dd/yy %H Decimal hour on 2 digits %I Decimal hour modulo 12 on 2 digits %M Decimal minute on 2 digits %S Decimal seconds on 2 digits %T HH:MM:SS %U Decimal week number, Sunday being first day of week %W Decimal week number, Monday being first day of week %X Same as %T %Y Decimal year on 4 digits %Z Time Zone (if any) %a Abbreviated name of the day %b Abbreviated name of the month %c Appropriate date & time (default format) %d Decimal day of the month on 2 digits %e Same as %d, but a space replaces leading 0 %h Same as %b %j Decimal dey of the year on 3 digits %m Decimal month on 2 digits %n Newline character %p AM or PM %r 12-hour clock time with AM/PM %s Number of seconds since the epoch %t Tab character %w Decimal day of the week (0=Sunday) %x Same as %D %y Decimal year on 2 digits SEE ALSO
time(2), ctime(3), readclock(8). DATE(1)
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