Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Extract from cal
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Extract from cal Post 302912875 by Corona688 on Tuesday 12th of August 2014 11:27:30 AM
Old 08-12-2014
I think you're onto something! The fourth line of the calendar is always complete, why not calculate from it?

That's robust/complete enough to work on any day of the week. 1 for Sunday, 7 for Saturday.

Code:
$ cal
     August 2014
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
                1  2
 3  4  5  6  7  8  9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31

$ for N in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
do
        cal | awk 'NR==4 { while(($DAY+0) > 7) $DAY -= 7; print $DAY; exit }' DAY=$N
done

3
4
5
6
7
1
2

$

There's probably a smarter way with modulous, but that's tricky and longwinded when numbers count from 1 instead of 0, so maybe not...
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Cal command

I am trying to configure the cal command to recognize the month names. When you type: cal - you get the calander for the current month of the current year. Is there a way of making the system recognize March, and Mar. So I could type: cal March or cal mar and get the same response as cal.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Astudent
5 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

cal

hey everyone. I'm new to UNIX, and I'm having trouble with the cal command. I know that you can display a calendar if you just type in 'cal 3 2005' for example. But how would you do it if you just wanted the calendars displayed to be from March 2005 to June 2005? Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: pythonman
4 Replies

3. AIX

doubt in cal command

I am new to unix... How to get all the saturdays of a specific year? for a specific month, i tried as below.. cal 02 2006 | awk '{print $7}' but it is not giving all saturdays.... can anyone help me with this? Thanks in advance, Sumi (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: sumi
9 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Cal question

This probably would be a cake walk for you, but i am having trouble with this. I am trying to print every tuesday of the month from cal, and the FS default is space. There is one row that has few spaces at the beginning and so when i print $3, those spaces get ingnored and a different day gets... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vin
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

parsing cal cmd

:o given a date example mm dd yyyy 01 02 1999 how can your parse cal 01 1999 and find the date in the above case 02 and display what the actual day was eg s m t w t f s Thanks in advance Dragrid (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: dragrid
7 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Get day of week from cal

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)
Discussion started by: bzylg
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

cal command

Hello, I wanted to display calender for the previou, current and next month in a single command... I used the command cal -3 for this. But its throwing me a Bad Argument error. I am using HP UX to execute this command. Is this a syntax error, or let me know if there any other ways to... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: atlantis
6 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

another cal command question.

I got this from this board yesterday cal | xargs -n1 | tail -1 which displays the current months days.. for instance if you type this in a shell today you will get 31. I would like to also display the month and year.. something like March 2011 has 31 days. how would I do that? ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rontopia
3 Replies

9. Homework & Coursework Questions

Using cal in a script

Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted! 1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data: Write a shell script that will: "Display" the number of days in the current month. For example: September... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: eaafuddy
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Cal -m on bash

Hi, I want to make Monday as the first day of the month while using cal command when I execute without bash, its working fine /bin/sh cal -m 03 2013 March 2013 Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: infyanurag
5 Replies
Date::ISO8601(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Date::ISO8601(3pm)

NAME
Date::ISO8601 - the three ISO 8601 numerical calendars SYNOPSIS
use Date::ISO8601 qw(present_y); print present_y($y); use Date::ISO8601 qw(month_days cjdn_to_ymd ymd_to_cjdn present_ymd); $md = month_days(2000, 2); ($y, $m, $d) = cjdn_to_ymd(2406029); $cjdn = ymd_to_cjdn(1875, 5, 20); print present_ymd(2406029); print present_ymd(1875, 5, 20); use Date::ISO8601 qw(year_days cjdn_to_yd yd_to_cjdn present_yd); $yd = year_days(2000); ($y, $d) = cjdn_to_yd(2406029); $cjdn = yd_to_cjdn(1875, 140); print present_yd(2406029); print present_yd(1875, 140); use Date::ISO8601 qw(year_weeks cjdn_to_ywd ywd_to_cjdn present_ywd); $yw = year_weeks(2000); ($y, $w, $d) = cjdn_to_ywd(2406029); $cjdn = ywd_to_cjdn(1875, 20, 4); print present_ywd(2406029); print present_ywd(1875, 20, 4); DESCRIPTION
The international standard ISO 8601 "Data elements and interchange formats - Information interchange - Representation of dates and times" defines three distinct calendars by which days can be labelled. It also defines textual formats for the representation of dates in these calendars. This module provides functions to convert dates between these three calendars and Chronological Julian Day Numbers, which is a suitable format to do arithmetic with. It also supplies functions that describe the shape of these calendars, to assist in calendrical calculations. It also supplies functions to represent dates textually in the ISO 8601 formats. ISO 8601 also covers time of day and time periods, but this module does nothing relating to those parts of the standard; this is only about labelling days. The first ISO 8601 calendar divides time up into years, months, and days. It corresponds exactly to the Gregorian calendar, invented by Aloysius Lilius and promulgated by Pope Gregory XIII in the late sixteenth century, with AD (CE) year numbering. This calendar is applied to all time, not just to dates after its invention nor just to years 1 and later. Thus for ancient dates it is the proleptic Gregorian calendar with astronomical year numbering. The second ISO 8601 calendar divides time up into the same years as the first, but divides the year directly into days, with no months. The standard calls this "ordinal dates". Ordinal dates are commonly referred to as "Julian dates", a mistake apparently deriving from true Julian Day Numbers, which divide time up solely into linearly counted days. The third ISO 8601 calendar divides time up into years, weeks, and days. The years approximate the years of the first two calendars, so they stay in step in the long term, but the boundaries differ. This week-based calendar is sometimes called "the ISO calendar", apparently in the belief that ISO 8601 does not define any other. It is also referred to as "business dates", because it is most used by certain businesses to whom the week is the most important temporal cycle. The Chronological Julian Day Number is an integral number labelling each day, where the day extends from midnight to midnight in whatever time zone is of interest. It is a linear count of days, where each day's number is one greater than the previous day's number. It is directly related to the Julian Date system: in the time zone of the prime meridian, the CJDN equals the JD at noon. By way of epoch, the day on which the Convention of the Metre was signed, which ISO 8601 defines to be 1875-05-20 (and 1875-140 and 1875-W20-4), is CJDN 2406029. This module places no limit on the range of dates to which it may be applied. All function arguments are permitted to be "Math::BigInt" or "Math::BigRat" objects in order to achieve arbitrary range. Native Perl integers are also permitted, as a convenience when the range of dates being handled is known to be sufficiently small. FUNCTIONS
Numbers in this API may be native Perl integers, "Math::BigInt" objects, or integer-valued "Math::BigRat" objects. All three types are acceptable for all parameters, in any combination. In all conversion functions, the most-significant part of the result (which is the only part with unlimited range) is of the same type as the most-significant part of the input. Less-significant parts of results (which have a small range) are consistently native Perl integers. All functions "die" if given invalid parameters. Years present_y(YEAR) Puts the given year number into ISO 8601 textual presentation format. For years [0, 9999] this is simply four digits. For years outside that range it is a sign followed by at least four digits. This is the minimum-length presentation format. If it is desired to use a form that is longer than necessary, such as to use at least five digits for all year numbers (as the Long Now Foundation does), then the right tool is "sprintf" (see "sprintf" in perlfunc). This format is unconditionally conformant to all versions of ISO 8601 for years [1583, 9999]. For years [0, 1582], preceding the historical introduction of the Gregorian calendar, it is conformant only where it is mutually agreed that such dates (represented in the proleptic Gregorian calendar) are acceptable. For years outside the range [0, 9999], where the expanded format must be used, the result is only conformant to ISO 8601:2004 (earlier versions lacked these formats), and only where it is mutually agreed to use this format. Gregorian calendar Each year is divided into twelve months, numbered [1, 12]; month number 1 is January. Each month is divided into days, numbered sequentially from 1. The month lengths are irregular. The year numbers have unlimited range. month_days(YEAR, MONTH) The parameters identify a month, and the function returns the number of days in that month as a native Perl integer. cjdn_to_ymd(CJDN) This function takes a Chronological Julian Day Number and returns a list of a year, month, and day. ymd_to_cjdn(YEAR, MONTH, DAY) This performs the reverse of the translation that "cjdn_to_ymd" does. It takes year, month, and day numbers, and returns the corresponding CJDN. present_ymd(CJDN) present_ymd(YEAR, MONTH, DAY) Puts the given date into ISO 8601 Gregorian textual presentation format. The `extended' format (with "-" separators) is used. The conformance notes for "present_y" apply to this function also. If the date is given as a (YEAR, MONTH, DAY) triplet then these are not checked for consistency. The MONTH and DAY values are only checked to ensure that they fit into the fixed number of digits. This allows the use of this function on data other than actual Gregorian dates. Ordinal dates Each year is divided into days, numbered sequentially from 1. The year lengths are irregular. The years correspond exactly to those of the Gregorian calendar. year_days(YEAR) The parameter identifies a year, and the function returns the number of days in that year as a native Perl integer. cjdn_to_yd(CJDN) This function takes a Chronological Julian Day Number and returns a list of a year and ordinal day. yd_to_cjdn(YEAR, DAY) This performs the reverse of the translation that "cjdn_to_yd" does. It takes year and ordinal day numbers, and returns the corresponding CJDN. present_yd(CJDN) present_yd(YEAR, DAY) Puts the given date into ISO 8601 ordinal textual presentation format. The `extended' format (with "-" separators) is used. The conformance notes for "present_y" apply to this function also. If the date is given as a (YEAR, DAY) pair then these are not checked for consistency. The DAY value is only checked to ensure that it fits into the fixed number of digits. This allows the use of this function on data other than actual ordinal dates. Week-based calendar Each year is divided into weeks, numbered sequentially from 1. Each week is divided into seven days, numbered [1, 7]; day number 1 is Monday. The year lengths are irregular. The year numbers have unlimited range. The years correspond to those of the Gregorian calendar. Each week is associated with the Gregorian year that contains its Thursday and hence contains the majority of its days. year_weeks(YEAR) The parameter identifies a year, and the function returns the number of weeks in that year as a native Perl integer. cjdn_to_ywd(CJDN) This function takes a Chronological Julian Day Number and returns a list of a year, week, and day. ywd_to_cjdn(YEAR, WEEK, DAY) This performs the reverse of the translation that "cjdn_to_ywd" does. It takes year, week, and day numbers, and returns the corresponding CJDN. present_ywd(CJDN) present_ywd(YEAR, WEEK, DAY) Puts the given date into ISO 8601 week-based textual presentation format. The `extended' format (with "-" separators) is used. The conformance notes for "present_y" apply to this function also. If the date is given as a (YEAR, WEEK, DAY) triplet then these are not checked for consistency. The WEEK and DAY values are only checked to ensure that they fit into the fixed number of digits. This allows the use of this function on data other than actual week- based dates. SEE ALSO
Date::JD, DateTime AUTHOR
Andrew Main (Zefram) <zefram@fysh.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2006, 2007, 2009 Andrew Main (Zefram) <zefram@fysh.org> LICENSE
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2010-03-30 Date::ISO8601(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:19 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy