strftime(F)
strftime --
language-specific strings for dates and times
Description
There can exist one printable file per locale
to specify its date and time formatting information.
These files must be kept in
the directory /usr/lib/locale/locale/LC_TIME.
The contents of these files are:
1.-
optional abbreviated month names (in order)
2.-
optional month names (in order)
3.-
optional abbreviated weekday names (in order)
4.-
optional weekday names (in order)
5.-
optional default strings that specify formats for locale time
(%X) and locale date (%x)
6.-
optional default format for cftime,
if the argument for cftime is a null
7.-
optional ante meridian string
8.-
optional post meridian string
9.-
optional default format for date command output
10.-
optional default format for local time for 12 hour clock (AM/PM form)
11.-
optional separator
12.-
optional alternate digit and era information for the locale
For 1-11 above, each
string is on a line by itself.
All white space is significant.
The order of the strings in the above list
is the same order in which they must appear in the file.
If item 12 is present and any of 1-10 are not specified,
item 11 must be present.
The separator is a lone % character.
Alternate digit and era information may be omitted.
If present, the amount of information is variable, and fields
are delimited by use of the following keywords.
They can be specified in any order.
alt_digits-
semicolon separated strings, each surrounded by double-quotes.
The first string is the alternate symbol for zero, the second is the
alternate for one, and so on up to a maximum of 100.
Less than 100 alternate digit symbols may be specified.
Lines may be continued using the backlash (\) character.
era_d_fmt-
definition of the date format in the alternate era notation.
This is a single string surrounded by double-quotes.
era_t_fmt-
definition of the time format in the alternate era notation.
This is a single string surrounded by double-quotes.
era_d_t_fmt-
definition of the date and time format in the alternate era notation.
This is a single string surrounded by double-quotes.
era-
semicolon separated strings, each surrounded by double-quotes.
Within each string is an era description segment which has
the following format:
dir:offset:start_date:end_date:era_name:era_format
dir-
a + or - character.
+ denotes that years closer
to the start_date have lower numbers than
those closer to the end_date.
- denotes that years closer to the start_date have higher
numbers than those closer to the end_date.
offset-
the year number closest to the start_date in the era.
start_date-
the date for the start of the era, in the form yyyy/mm/dd,
where yyyy is the year, mm is the month,
and dd is the day.
Years prior to AD 1 are represented as negative.
end_date-
the date for the end of the era.
This has the same format as start_date except the two special
values -* and +*, denote that the end date is the beginning
of time, and the end of time, respectively.
era_name-
a string for the name of the era
era_format-
a string for formatting the year in the era
Multiple era segments may be specified.
Additional segments may be added using the backlash (\) character
as a continuation character for the era.
Example
Here are the contents of /usr/lib/locale/C/LC_TIME:
Jan
Feb
...
January
February
...
Sun
Mon
...
Sunday
Monday
...
%H:%M:%S
%m/%d/%y
%a %b %d %T %Z %Y
AM
PM
%a %b %d %T %Z %Y
%I:%M:%S %p
Alternate digit and era information may be defined as follows:
alt_digits "0th";"1st";"2nd";"3rd";"4th";"5th";"6th";"7th";\
"8th";"9th";"10th";"11th";"12th";"13th";"14th";"15th"
era_d_fmt "The alternative date format is %Y (%a) in %EC"
era_t_fmt "The alternative time format is %h (%S) in %EC"
era_d_t_fmt "The alternative date and time is %Y %H :%M:%S (%a) in %EC"
era "+:0:1992/10/22:+*:XPG4-Era:The Year of %EC";\
"+:1:1989/01/01:1992/10/21:XPG3-Era:The Year of %EC";\
"+:0:0000/01/01:1988/12/31:Pre-XPG:The Year of %EC";\
"+:1:-0001/12/31:-*:BC:%Ey %EC"
Files
/usr/lib/locale/locale/LC_TIME
References
ctime(S),
date(C),
setlocale(S),
strftime(S),
strptime(S)
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 - 02 June 2005