On Wed, Dec 18, 2019 at 1:46 PM John Pilkington
wrote:
> On 18/12/2019 15:12, Mark C. Allman wrote:
> >
> > The month value range is 0 to 11, not 1 to 12. You're calculating
> > 12/30/2019 at 23:59:59 to 01/01/2020 at 00:00:00, or 86401 seconds.
> >
>
> This is in accord with 'man mktime' but it
On 18/12/2019 15:12, Mark C. Allman wrote:
On 12/18/19 9:17 AM, Jouk Jansen wrote:
Hi All,
I'm strugling with the C-function mktime. According to the man-pages it
returns "secondsĀ sinceĀ the Epoch". I tried to use this functions to get
differnces from two date-times , but was could not interpr
On 12/18/19 10:24 AM, Walter H. wrote:
Hello,
I tried your programme on my system (other linux distribution), and got the
same result;
even on windows the same results;
but this is interesting
# date --date="Dec 1 00:00:00 2019" +"%s"
1575154800
# date --date="Nov 30 23:59:59 2019" +"%s"
15751
Hello,
I tried your programme on my system (other linux distribution), and got
the same result;
even on windows the same results;
but this is interesting
# date --date="Dec 1 00:00:00 2019" +"%s"
1575154800
# date --date="Nov 30 23:59:59 2019" +"%s"
1575154799
there you have this 1 second d
On 12/18/19 9:17 AM, Jouk Jansen wrote:
Hi All,
I'm strugling with the C-function mktime. According to the man-pages it
returns "seconds since the Epoch". I tried to use this functions to get
differnces from two date-times , but was could not interpret the result.
When trying to get the diffre
Hi All,
I'm strugling with the C-function mktime. According to the man-pages it
returns "seconds since the Epoch". I tried to use this functions to get
differnces from two date-times , but was could not interpret the result.
When trying to get the diffrence between 30 Nov 2019 23:59:59 and 1 Dec