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[Popcon-developers] Bug#322261: popularity-contest: hints on translating time_t numbers to dates



tags 322261 pending
quit
On Wed, Feb 08, 2006 at 10:25:05AM -0500, Nathan Stratton Treadway wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 11, 2005 at 03:14:24PM +0200, Bill Allombert wrote:
> > On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 10:07:41PM -0500, Nathan Stratton Treadway wrote:
> > > Package: popularity-contest
> > > Version: 1.28
> > > Severity: wishlist
> > > 
> > > 
> > > I was interested in converting the atime and ctime "time_t" integers found
> > > in my popularity contest reports into a human-readable date.  I eventually
> > > ran across the "ctime()" function in Python's "time" module which did the
> > > conversion I wanted, but I wasn't able to find any "simple" command line
> > > utility that was able to convert in that direction.  
> > > 
> > > (For example, the "date" command's %s format directive will return the
> > > time_t integer for the date being displayed, but the --date= option
> > > doesn't seem to let me specify a date using the time_t integer.)
> > 
> > IMHO, this should rather be reported as a wishlist to the date utility.
> > You can use 
> > date -d "$((`date +%s` - $DATE )) seconds ago"
> 
> For what it's worth, I eventually found that the Info documentation for "date"
> does contain a page of examples:
>   info coreutiles "examples of date"
> 
> That page suggests using the following syntax to do the
> time_t-to-readable conversion:
>   date -d "1970-01-01 UTC 1139229934 seconds"
> 
> > perl -e 'print scalar localtime '$DATE',"\n"'
> > where $DATE is the the date you want to convert.
> 
> Also good to know.  Thanks.

OK, I have included this in the FAQ in the package and on the website.
Thanks for providing a solution.

The bug will be closed when the package will be uploaded.

Cheers,
-- 
Bill. <ballombe@debian.org>

Imagine a large red swirl here. 



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