/ David Champion wrote on Fri 9.Nov'12 at 15:00:44 -0600 / > * On 09 Nov 2012, Jeremy Kitchen wrote: > > On Fri, Nov 09, 2012 at 11:12:34AM +0000, Jamie Paul Griffin wrote: > > > Hi > > > > > > I would like to use the method of setting messages to expire described > > > on Gary's page[1] but the problem is that this script uses gnu date(1) > > > and I have BSD date(1). > > > > there's no compatible option with bsd `date`? > > > > You could also replace the call to `date` with a $SCRIPTING_LANGUAGE > > script (perl would probably work pretty well for this, and I believe > > perl is pretty standard on the BSDs) which does the same thing. All it's > > doing with GNU `date` is spitting out an RFC822 formatted `date`, which > > I would think BSD `date` is capable of doing, but a simple perl script > > would definitely be able to. > > The greater problem in Gary's script for Jamie is not printing an RFC822 > date (there is no one-shot option, but the formatters are all there), > but parsing date/time from natural language, which GNU date's '-d' does. > > Python option: > $ easy_install parsedatetime > $ python > >>> from parsedatetime.parsedatetime import Calendar > >>> import time > >>> rfc822format = '%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S -0000' > >>> c = Calendar() > >>> st, flag = c.parse('next Monday at 2pm') > >>> t = time.mktime(st) > >>> tm = time.gmtime(t) > >>> time.strftime(rfc822format, tm) > 'Mon, 12 Nov 2012 20:00:00 -0000' > > parsedatetime doesn't know anything about timezones, so the mktime and > gmtime are just to adapt the struct_time value from c.parse() from local > time to GMT, so that the RFC822 address can assume it. This lets the > script work for anyone, without needing to calculate a zone offset for > your locale.
Hi David, et al I wondered if you would mind showing me how I could use your python code above to implement it into Gary's idea for creating the mail Expiry date macro? I am a total python beginner and so can't quite make sense of what i need to do to achieve what i need. Best wishes, Jamie.