Thank you Soeren,

If I want to register an irregular set of daily maps (missing days), will
the end date need to be the next day (say 5 days after this image, 2 days
after in the next image)?

Cheers,
Yann


On 5 March 2014 12:14, Sören Gebbert <soerengebb...@googlemail.com> wrote:

> Hi Yann,
> if you need support for time zones you have to use postgresql as
> backend. Unfortunately sqlite does not support time zones. A work
> around would be to ignore the time zone and use t.shift to temporally
> shift the created STRDS by 5h and 30 min to UTC time after registering
> the maps. I should notice this in the help page, i don't know why i
> missed that ..???!!!
>
> The next thing is that TGRASS uses time intervals in which the end
> time is not part of the time interval, but the start time of a
> successor. That means that you do not need to know how many days in a
> month are;  Interval of one day: start="2004-05-10" end="2004-05-11"
>
> Best regards
> Soeren
>
> 2014-03-05 6:36 GMT+01:00 Yann Chemin <yche...@gmail.com>:
> > Hi,
> >
> > input line is:
> > t.register input=ta maps=ta_2004131 start="2004-05-10 00:00:00 +0530"
> > end="2004
> > -05-10 23:59:59 +0530"
> >
> > temporal says:
> >   File "/usr/lib/python2.7/sqlite3/dbapi2.py", line 69, in
> convert_timestamp
> >     hours, minutes, seconds = map(int, timepart_full[0].split(":"))
> > ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: '00+05'
> >
> > Manual says following format accepted:
> > start=string
> > Valid start date and time of the first map. Format absolute time:
> > "yyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:SS +HHMM", relative time is of type integer).
> > end=string
> > Valid end date and time of all map. Format absolute time: "yyyy-mm-dd
> > HH:MM:SS +HHMM", relative time is of type integer).
> >
> > yann
> > --
> > ----
>



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