Strange behaviour of the strftime() function from gawk (3.1.5):
$ awk 'BEGIN{print strftime("%T", 3600)}'
> 02:00:00
$ awk 'BEGIN{print strftime("%T", 0)}'
> 01:00:00
Obviously something with DST but I can not figure out why? To me 3600 epoch seconds remains 01:00, DST or not.
From... (2 Replies)
Hi Everyone
i have a perl file below, one of the line is convert the pcho time to human readable format.
$value=`awk 'BEGIN{print strftime("%c",1273236600)}' | tr -d '\n'`;
if image, if i have lots of pcho time value in a file, if i use this awk, strftime, then tr -d to remove the \n,... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am facing one strange situation while using strftime() to get current date and time in C.
it leaks memory with %T
strftime(L_StrDate,30,"%d-%b-%C%y %T", localtime((time_t *)&tv.tv_sec)) ;
and when i use another option then no memory leak like
strftime(L_StrDate,30,"%d-%b-%C%y ... (3 Replies)
HI,
i wish to convert a millsec value to a readable string format.
the one option is to use strftime.
However this is a bit costly (1-5 micros).
is there a a faster way to do so with just string manipulation
(Note i have the date object which has the time details but wish o avoid strftime) (2 Replies)
I frequently use awk time functions and am switching some scripts over to mawk. I don't have the mktime or strftime functions in mawk, but it appears that there is a way, as explained here in "Time functions":
Please only cut-and-past links to man pages from our man pages.
So, simple... (10 Replies)
I'm trying to use AWK to filter on some dates in a field by converting them to Unix Time.
mktime(strftime(format,"6-FEB-2013 08:50:03.841")What is the proper format for my date strings as they appear in my database?
My first thought is %d-%b-%Y %H:%M:%Sbut I see the following issues:
%d is... (3 Replies)
I have a lines like below, captured from rrdtool fetch command,
1395295200 2.0629986254e+06 7.4634784967e+05
1395297000 2.0198121616e+06 6.8658888903e+05
1395298800 1.8787141122e+06 6.7482866452e+05
1395300600 1.7586118678e+06 6.7867977653e+05
1395302400 1.8222762151e+06 7.1301678859e+05I'm... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rk4k
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
date::language::bulgarian5.18
Date::Language::Bulgarian(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Date::Language::Bulgarian(3)NAME
Date::Language::Bulgarian - localization for Date::Format
DESCRIPTION
This is Bulgarian localization for Date::Format. It is important to note that this module source code is in utf8. All strings which it
outputs are in utf8, so it is safe to use it currently only with English. You are left alone to try and convert the output when using
different Date::Language::* in the same application. This should be addresed in the future.
SYNOPSIS
use strict;
use warnings;
use Date::Language;
local $=$/;
my $template ='%a %b %e %T %Y (%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)';
my $time=1290883821; #or just use time();
my @lt = localtime($time);
my %languages = qw(English GMT German EEST Bulgarian EET);
binmode(select,':utf8');
foreach my $l(keys %languages){
my $lang = Date::Language->new($l);
my $zone = $languages{$l};
print $/. "$l $zone";
print $lang->time2str($template, $time);
print $lang->time2str($template, $time, $zone);
print $lang->strftime($template, @lt);
}
AUTHOR
Krasimir Berov (berov@cpan.org)
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2010 Krasimir Berov. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
itself.
perl v5.18.2 2010-12-14 Date::Language::Bulgarian(3)