$Sir NM2Date: Difference between revisions
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<li>Japanese functions</li> | <li>Japanese functions</li> | ||
<li>[http://m204wiki.rocketsoftware.com/images/4/4b/SirfieldNew.pdf Sir2000 Field Migration Facility]</li> | <li>[http://m204wiki.rocketsoftware.com/images/4/4b/SirfieldNew.pdf Sir2000 Field Migration Facility]</li> | ||
<li>[ | <li>[http://m204wiki.rocketsoftware.com/images/d/d6/Ul2krNew.pdf Sir2000 User Language Tools]</li> | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
[[Category:$Functions|$Sir_NM2Date]] | [[Category:$Functions|$Sir_NM2Date]] |
Revision as of 20:10, 14 July 2014
Convert datetime number of milliseconds to string
Note: Most Sirius $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. The OO equivalent for the $Sir_NM2Date function is MillisecondsToString.
The $Sir_NM2Date function expects a numeric datetime argument containing a number of milliseconds since January 1, 1900, and a datetime format string. It returns the date represented by the first argument, in the format corresponding to the second argument. $Sir_NM2Date accepts an optional error control string and returns the null string if an error is detected.
Syntax
%dat = $Sir_NM2Date(datn, fmt, errctl)
Syntax terms
%dat | Set to the datetime value string, using format specified by fmt, corresponding to datn, unless an error is detected. |
---|---|
datn | Datetime number containing a signed number of milliseconds since January 1, 1900. |
fmt | Datetime format string. Refer to "Datetime string formats" for an explanation of valid datetime formats and valid datetime values. |
errctl | Optional error control string; refer to "Datetime error handling". |
Usage notes
- The inverse of this $function is $Sir_Date2NM.
- $Sir_NM2Date returns a null string in the following cases (see the discussion in "Datetime error handling"):
- fmt is not a valid datetime format.
- datn out of range.
Example
The following fragment prints the string 07/31/84:
%X = $Sir_Date2NM('8407301230', 'YYMMDDHHMI') * Add 15 hours: %X = %X + 1000 * 60 * 60 * 15 PRINT $Sir_NM2Date(%X, 'MM/DD/YY')