You have a date and time in Epoch seconds, and you want to calculate individual DMYHMS values from it.
Use the localtime
or gmtime
functions, depending on whether you want the date and time in GMT or your local time zone.
($seconds, $minutes, $hours, $day_of_month, $month, $year, $wday, $yday, $isdst) = localtime($time);
The standard Time::timelocal and Time::gmtime modules override the localtime
and gmtime
functions to provide named access to the individual values.
use Time::localtime; # or Time::gmtime $tm = localtime($TIME); # or gmtime($TIME) $seconds = $tm->sec; # ...
The localtime
and gmtime
functions return strange year and month values; the year has 1900 subtracted from it, and 0 is the month value for January. Be sure to correct the base values for year and month, as this example does:
($seconds, $minutes, $hours, $day_of_month, $month, $year, $wday, $yday, $isdst) = localtime($time); printf("Dateline: %02d:%02d:%02d-%04d/%02d/%02d\n", $hours, $minutes, $seconds, $year+1900, $month+1, $day_of_month);
We could have used the Time::localtime module to avoid the temporary variables:
use Time::localtime; $tm = localtime($time); printf("Dateline: %02d:%02d:%02d-%04d/%02d/%02d\n", $tm->hour, $tm->min, $tm->sec, $tm->year+1900, $tm->mon+1, $tm->mday);
The localtime
function in perlfunc (1) and Chapter 3 of Programming Perl; the documentation for the standard Time::localtime and Time::gmtime modules; convert in the other direction using Recipe 3.2
Copyright © 2001 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.