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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Can anyone help me to print UNIX epoch time to days,hours,min,sec ? Post 302956846 by jim mcnamara on Sunday 4th of October 2015 07:45:14 PM
Old 10-04-2015
As a note - with Linux (GNU date) try:
Code:
 date --date='@1441678454803' +'%a %H %m %S'

Bad number? It is for the year 47654
Plus the number you gave will not work as a valid UNIX epoch second on a lot of older systems because it is for the year far in the future -- %Y prints the full year 4 or more digits. I ran this on a 64 bit OS so it would correctly output:

Code:
 date --date='@1441678454803' +'%a %H %m %S %Y'
Sun 22 12 43 47654

So I would question this number as a valid date
This User Gave Thanks to jim mcnamara For This Post:
 

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sttime(3)						    ShapeTools Toolkit Library							 sttime(3)

NAME
stMktime, stWriteTime - date and time handling SYNOPSIS
#include <config.h> #include <sttk.h.h> time_tstMktime (char *string); char*stWriteTime (time_t date); DESCRIPTION
stMktime scans the given string and tries to read a date and time from it. It understands various formats of date strings. The following is a list of all valid formats, optional parts in brackets. [Tue] Jan 5[,] [19]93 This includes the standard asctime(3) format. Jan 5 With no year given, the year defaults to the current year. [19]93/01/05 This notation requires month and day represented by exactly two digits. 5.1.[19]93 This is the usual German notation. 5.1. German notation referencing the current year. A certain time, given together with the date must always have the following form. hours:minutes[:seconds] Each of the fields must be an integer value within the proper range (hours: 0-23, minutes and seconds: 0-59). Values below 10 may be written as one digit numbers. The time value may be placed anywhere in the date string: at the beginning, at the end, or somewhere in the middle. Any amount of white- space may be given between a field of the time value and the separating colon. The time is always considered to be local time. stWriteTime generates a time string similar to asctime(3) from its date argument. SEE ALSO
asctime(3) BUGS
Time Zone Names within the time string (like `MET') are not handled properly. In most cases they will cause a failure. sttk-1.7 Thu Jun 24 17:43:35 1993 sttime(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:51 AM.
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