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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting PS1 with date stamp included in prompt Post 35133 by kymberm on Friday 28th of March 2003 03:09:02 PM
Old 03-28-2003
Eureka!

Decided to split it up in 2 parts. AND IT WORKED. For anyone else's info, i did this in my .profile (and be careful of the ` vs ' marks, that trips me up sometimes)

MYTIME=`date +%H:%M`
PS1='[Name::'\$MYTIME\$PWD']$>'

notice the ' vs ` for the date and PS1 commands. I did this because I found myself constantly typing date at the prompt to look at log files and such and when they were created, which is most current vs what time the server has, blah blah. So, for anyone's interest, that's how it can be done.

Thanks!
 

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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 06:51 AM.
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