💾 Archived View for bbs.geminispace.org › u › gyaradong › 5204 captured on 2023-11-14 at 10:08:29. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-11-04)

➡️ Next capture (2023-12-28)

🚧 View Differences

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Comment by 🐉 gyaradong

Re: "Converting Unix timestamp to date/time"

In: s/programming

some notes:

- a country went into daylight savings and never came out

- countries and states routinely change the dates when coming into or out of daylight savings.

- a country one skipped a week or rewound a week. can't remember which.

- a small island went from one side of the international date line to the other. I think they are now beyond 12 hours forward.

I'm never touching a time library.

🐉 gyaradong

Sep 11 · 2 months ago

2 Later Comments ↓

🦀 jeang3nie · Sep 11 at 15:03:

Crap, don't get me started on daylight savings time.

🚀 stack · Sep 11 at 17:05:

I am passing the buck to the user, of course. A variable will keep the timezone adjustment offset, and whoever cares about this will set it to the right amount.

At this point, it is very likely that I will be the only user anyway.

X

Original Post

🌒 s/programming

Converting Unix timestamp to date/time — Without any outside libraries. All we have is a Unix timestamp, seconds since Jan. 1, 1970. I'm looking for a minimalistic solution for my tiny nForth, but really curious if anyone has tricks up their sleeve for this kind of a task. I'm willing to ignore leap seconds for now. So far I got the time part: add timezone in seconds, divide by 86400 to get days, and use the remainder for time in seconds. The rest is trivial, dividing by 60 for minutes and 60...

💬 stack · 10 comments · 1 like · Sep 10 · 2 months ago