I'm on Windows Perl 5.8.8 and I'm writing an app that needs to deal with
daylight savings time. The date is an RFC 822 formatted date which looks
like this Wed, 03 Sep 2008 08:58:27 -0800, and what I'm looking for is
the -0800 part which changes based on the daylight savings time state.
I want
On Thu, Jan 26, 2012 at 10:27 PM, Barry Brevik bbre...@stellarmicro.com wrote:
I'm on Windows Perl 5.8.8 and I'm writing an app that needs to deal with
daylight savings time. The date is an RFC 822 formatted date which looks
like this Wed, 03 Sep 2008 08:58:27 -0800, and what I'm looking
In list context it returns the DST state as the last
value so (localtime())[-1] would give that value.
OK, that is just lame of me to miss that. Thank you so much.
Barry Brevik
___
Perl-Win32-Users mailing list
On Thu, 26 Jan 2012, Barry Brevik wrote:
In list context it returns the DST state as the last value so
(localtime())[-1] would give that value.
OK, that is just lame of me to miss that. Thank you so much.
Not sure if this matters to you, but at least older versions of
Windows (before Vista)
On Thu, 26 Jan 2012, Barry Brevik wrote:
In list context it returns the DST state as the last value so
(localtime())[-1] would give that value.
OK, that is just lame of me to miss that. Thank you so much.
Not sure if this matters to you, but at least older versions of
Windows
(before
What, nobody else had a daylight savings time change issue? Well, I sure
did.
I check certain files' modification dates against a modification date
stored in a database for the corresponding file. The files were not
modified since they were entered into the database, i.e. the dates
should have
Dirk Bremer wrote:
What, nobody else had a daylight savings time change issue? Well, I sure
did.
I check certain files' modification dates against a modification date
stored in a database for the corresponding file. The files were not
modified since they were entered into the database, i.e
Dirk Bremer wrote:
I check certain files' modification dates against a modification date
stored in a database for the corresponding file. The files were not
modified since they were entered into the database, i.e. the dates
should have been equal. At about 01:00 on 10-30-2005, things were a bit
-Original Message-
From: David Dick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 31, 2005 14:57
To: Dirk Bremer
Cc: perl-win32-users@listserv.ActiveState.com
Subject: Re: Daylight Savings Time
Dirk Bremer wrote:
I check certain files' modification dates against