-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: TIGER192 Was Fri, 07 Apr 2006, at 13:55:47 +0400, when lusfert wrote:
> John W. Moore III wrote on 07.04.2006 2:37: >> David Shaw wrote: >> >>>> OS setting via LC_TIME, according to Microsoft, though I have no idea >>>> how to set it on win32. >> >> Right Click on the Clock, Select Setting Time/Date. >> > http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a142/someuser00/right_click_on_clock.png > Where is "Setting Time/Date"? > Then I clicked Adjust Date/Time: > http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a142/someuser00/date_and_time_settings.png > Where can I set date format (via LC_TIME)? Since you use XP, then... Control Panel | Regional and Language Options | Regional Options | Customize... | Time. The next tab is for the Date format. Clicking on the Clock (squatting in the tray) makes you able just to "wind up" the clock and to set the Time Zone. *** These settings are automatically accepted then by the "command line" environment in XP as well, and thus should be accepted by all programs working in this/such environment. *** In Windows 98 SE for instance, the time/date format in DOS is set in a different way(s). One of them is to define a permanent environment variable via Config.sys file where you enter the "country code", which defines time/date format. It looks like this... country=038,,c:\Windows\command\country.sys ...and this one gives format like this... yyyy-mm-dd HH:mm:ss ...where the capitalized "HH" gives 24 hours time format while the lower case "hh" gives 12 hour AM/PM format. *** Now, some previous versions of GnuPG are, with the US time format, displaying verbosely (the local) Time Zone as well, which is a bit better anyway, whilst the newer 1.4x versions are displaying only the US format giving no data about Time Zone. For instance, in version 1.2.3-nr1 it displays this... gpg: Signature made 04/07/06 11:55:58 Central Europe Daylight Time using DSA key ID 500B8987 ...whilst in versions 1.4x it is like this... gpg: Signature made 04/07/06 11:55:58 using DSA key ID 500B8987. *** The inconsistency in the, for instance, US date format (although it can be found in some other countries as well), might be elegantly corrected by using the so called "universal" or "astronomical" (or "military") date/time format which makes such sort of orientation much clearer, faster and better. It gives consistent values going from the higher to lower ones, that is yy|yy, mm, dd, HH, mm, ss (century|year, month, day, 24hour information, minute, second), which makes it excellent for computing/administration (and with minimum data; no PM, AM and similar). I don't know how to solve this in GnuPG, or in some programs/parts of the very OS. Notepad itself in XP for instance gives anyway a messed format (via F5) displaying firstly time and then date... 14:38 06-04-07 ...which makes it useless for the ".LOG" function, whilst EDXOR (and some other programs like KeyNote, Treepad Lite etc.) gives it exactly as it is set on the OS level... 06-04-07 14:38:44 ...which shows that such a response of a program to the OS is possible. I am not sure for EDXOR and Treepad Lite, but KeyNote is of open source so analyzing the related parts of the code maybe might help. - -- Mica PGP keys nestled at: http://blueness.port5.com/pgpkeys/ ~~~ For personal mail please use my address as it is *exactly* given in my "From|Reply To" field(s). ~~~ Don't put a cat on your head, it hurts real bad! -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQEVAwUBRDZlzrSpHvHEUtv8AQbCwAf9HDdnOMJv5NJYVqnSR2yjtgqtmaIDdGFj Cd5iQOdtWLUJ6wEip4Ed2R2bCLgGrSbFeHfhKGQzi7udozFUiQdt8WQE9F8camsF wWfcev46QXKk9IeDDnFKbqSQc73vKawuNrM/W0fiNDvu4h1vn2XhRpqE7dYn92Qj mUBRw6KnljAjD7ul345Mh73OUU0CjVdCdAZNSn1yb792kvsNAXeBPR92CmlQvZop DIf2gj+kBaksoHNsFX7PDwYeJSaVuoUTBmae+28uz2DdcoXsmIst6oQLFt3Ovuqi DuahR0mKQOH9glyQ8RhcFFT98L05Bb1NNiK4s8tktqU6YSC2Pk0qEw== =9RV4 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users