Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
Also the date function syntax:
http://au.php.net/manual/en/function.date.php
I think it is really important to get a universal thing going on.
Original comment by balup...@gmail.com
on 20 Mar 2008 at 12:38
I've come up with the following as a temporary solution.
Original comment by balup...@gmail.com
on 20 Mar 2008 at 1:29
Attachments:
@balupton - ok, A while back I also played with this same concept of just
converting
the PHP/Unix date format into a Java/.NET date format. Your persistence got me
thinking again and I've reconsidered adding the functionality into the library.
The
conversion function probably will not make it into the core library, but I will
add
to an optional "extras.js" module.
Original comment by geoff%co...@gtempaccount.com
on 26 Mar 2008 at 5:42
Ok awesome, problem is that the PHP date/strftime also have a lot more things
than
Date.toString, so will you be working on adding that, or just make a conversion
function?
And thanks a bunch!
Original comment by balup...@gmail.com
on 27 Mar 2008 at 1:58
@balupton - I added a new extras.js module that includes a the .format()
function
which takes a Unix/PHP date format string as a parameter.
The .format() function supports all the format specifiers. Each format
specifier is
listed in the FormatSpecifiers wiki documentation. See
http://code.google.com/p/datejs/wiki/FormatSpecifiers
I also added a Date.normalizeFormat() function which will converts a PHP format
string to Java/.NET format string. A PHP format string can be used with
.$format or
.format. A Java/.NET format string can be used with .toString(). The .parseExact
function will only accept a Java/.NET format string
Example
Date.normalizeFormat("%m/%d/%y"); // "MM/dd/yy"
var f1 = "%m/%d/%y"
var f2 = Date.normalizeFormat(f1); // "MM/dd/yy"
new Date().format(f1); // "04/13/08"
new Date().$format(f1); // "04/13/08"
new Date().toString(f2); // "04/13/08"
var date = Date.parseExact("04/13/08", f2); // Sun Apr 13 2008
I also added .strftime() which will format a local Unix timestamp according to
locale
settings.
Example
Date.strftime("%m/%d/%y", new Date()); // "04/13/08"
Date.strftime("c", "2008-04-13T17:52:03Z"); // "04/13/08"
I also added .strtotime() which will parse any textual datetime description
into a
Unix timestamp. A Unix timestamp is the number of seconds that have elapsed
since
January 1, 1970 (midnight UTC/GMT).
Example
Date.strtotime("04/13/08"); // 1208044800
Date.strtotime("1970-01-01T00:00:00Z"); // 0
More information is available in the CHANGELOG
(http://www.datejs.com/changelog).
The extras.js file is available in SVN at the following location
(http://www.datejs.com/svn/extras/).
Hope this helps.
Original comment by geoff%co...@gtempaccount.com
on 14 Apr 2008 at 5:22
Ok great. Although I'm a bit confused over what files I should be including?
Should I include core.js date-en-AU.js and extras.js ? And how would I go about
merging all of these into one packed file?
Original comment by balup...@gmail.com
on 17 May 2008 at 12:40
Just include the appropriate culture-specific file (date-en-AU.js) and then
extras.js.
Example
<script type="text/javascript" src="date-en-AU.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="extras.js"></script>
The culture-specific file (date-en-US.js) already includes core.js.
Each culture-specific file is made of the following:
1. A CultureInfo file (this is culture specific)
2. core.js
3. parser.js
4. sugarpak.js
A compressed version of extras.js is provided in the /build/ folder. Probably
the
easiest thing to do to merge extras.js into date-en-AU.js would be to
copy/paste the
contents of the /build/extras.js into the end of /build/date-en-AU.js.
Hope this helps.
Original comment by geoff%co...@gtempaccount.com
on 17 May 2008 at 8:47
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
balup...@gmail.com
on 20 Mar 2008 at 12:30