On Wednesday, January 16, 2013 09:15:39 n00b wrote: > Nevermind, found it myself. > SysTime* sys = new SysTime(standardTime, UTC()); > sys.hour; > > Le 16/01/2013 08:07, n00b a écrit : > > Hello, I'm kinda ashamed to ask that here, but std.datetime > > documentation is so complex... I only want to get hour/minute from a > > t_time (no timezone). > > I'm moving to D2, the equivalent code in D1 was: > > > > std.date.Date date; > > date.parse(std.date.toUTCString(time)); > > date.hour;
Do you mean time_t (I've never heard of t_time)? You'll need to call unixTimeToStdTime on a time_t if you want to pass it to SysTime's constructor. And if you need to be careful of time_t if you're on Windows, because Microsoft screwed it up (for some bizarre reason, they apply DST to time_t - DST in the _local_ time zone - making it so that the offset between the local time and time_t is always the same instead of making time_t UTC like it's supposed to be). std.datetime assumes that you're dealing with a true time_t which is in UTC if you give it a time_t. Also, if you haven't already, you should read this article on std.datetime: http://dlang.org/intro-to-datetime.html - Jonathan m Davis
