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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users [SOLVED] Making mktime/strftime available to mawk Post 302882715 by treesloth on Wednesday 8th of January 2014 06:03:20 PM
Old 01-08-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
Well, what is your system? does it have mktime and strftime?

The first thing that comes to mind is upgrading your version of mawk.
Thanks for the reply. I'm running CentOS 6.0 x86_64. I'm very sorry to say I don't know how to determine whether it has mktime and strftime. How would I do that?

Also, while the unix.com man page library does have a mawk entry, it appears to differ from the one I linked, lacking at least the time-related entries I cited. Is it still ok to link externally in that case?

Again, thanks for the help.

Last edited by treesloth; 01-08-2014 at 07:12 PM..
 

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GMDATE(3)								 1								 GMDATE(3)

gmdate - Format a GMT/UTC date/time

SYNOPSIS
string gmdate (string $format, [int $timestamp = time()]) DESCRIPTION
Identical to the date(3) function except that the time returned is Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). PARAMETERS
o $format - The format of the outputted date string. See the formatting options for the date(3) function. o $timestamp - The optional $timestamp parameter is an integer Unix timestamp that defaults to the current local time if a $timestamp is not given. In other words, it defaults to the value of time(3). RETURN VALUES
Returns a formatted date string. If a non-numeric value is used for $timestamp, FALSE is returned and an E_WARNING level error is emitted. CHANGELOG
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+ |Version | | | | | | | Description | | | | +--------+---------------------------------------------------+ | 5.1.0 | | | | | | | The valid range of a timestamp is typically from | | | Fri, 13 Dec 1901 20:45:54 GMT to Tue, 19 Jan 2038 | | | 03:14:07 GMT. (These are the dates that corre- | | | spond to the minimum and maximum values for a | | | 32-bit signed integer). However, before PHP 5.1.0 | | | this range was limited from 01-01-1970 to | | | 19-01-2038 on some systems (e.g. Windows). | | | | | 5.1.1 | | | | | | | There are useful constants of standard date/time | | | formats that can be used to specify the $format | | | parameter. | | | | +--------+---------------------------------------------------+ EXAMPLES
Example #1 gmdate(3) example When run in Finland (GMT +0200), the first line below prints "Jan 01 1998 00:00:00", while the second prints "Dec 31 1997 22:00:00". <?php echo date("M d Y H:i:s", mktime(0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1998)); echo gmdate("M d Y H:i:s", mktime(0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1998)); ?> SEE ALSO
date(3), mktime(3), gmmktime(3), strftime(3). PHP Documentation Group GMDATE(3)
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