$Sir DateNM: Difference between revisions

From m204wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (1 revision)
m (1 revision)
Line 34: Line 34:
</ul>
</ul>


<h2>Products authorizing {{PAGENAMEE}}</h2><ul class="smallAndTightList">
==Products authorizing {{PAGENAMEE}}==
<ul class="smallAndTightList">
<li>[[Sirius functions]]</li>
<li>[[Sirius functions]]</li>
<li>[[Fast/Unload User Language Interface]]</li>
<li>[[Fast/Unload User Language Interface]]</li>

Revision as of 21:32, 7 November 2012

Current date and time as number of milliseconds

Most Sirius $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. The OO equivalent of $Sir_DateNM is CurrentTimeMilliseconds.

The $Sir_DateNM function has no arguments and returns the number of 1/1000th seconds since 1 January, 1900.

Syntax

<section begin="syntax" />%num = $Sir_DateNM <section end="syntax" />

where

%num set to the number of 1/1000th seconds (milliseconds) from 1 Jan 1900 12:00 AM to the current date and time.

For example, the following fragment will print the date and time 1.8 seconds from the current time:

PRINT $Sir_NM2Date($Sir_DateNM + 1800, 'MM/DD/YY HH:MI:SS.XX')

$Sir_DateNM has no error conditions.

Notes:

  • Values returned by $Sir_DateNM will exceed the range that can be represented in a 4-byte integer, so you should probably avoid storing the value in a BINARY or FLOAT4 field.
  • To obtain the current date and time in a readable form, use $Sir_Date.
  • To convert the number of milliseconds to a readable form, use $Sir_NM2Date.

Products authorizing $Sir_DateNM