$Time: Difference between revisions

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The second-delimiter applies only if time-format is <code>2</code>. You must enclose the delimiters with single quotation marks.</p>
The second-delimiter applies only if time-format is <code>2</code>. You must enclose the delimiters with single quotation marks.</p>
<p>
<p>
You can suppress the first-delimiter or the second-delimiter character by using a single quoted null string.</p>
You can suppress the first-delimiter or the second-delimiter character by using a single quoted null string. To suppress both delimiters, use two single quoted null strings separated by a comma.</p>


==Examples==
==Examples==
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<td>HH MM SS</td></tr>
<td>HH MM SS</td></tr>


<tr><td>$Time(1,'') </td>
<tr><td>$Time(1,&apos;&apos;) </td>
<td>HHMMSS</td></tr>
<td>HHMMSS</td></tr>



Latest revision as of 17:15, 24 April 2017

Returns the current time of day in the format specified.

Syntax

$Time(time-format,'first-delimiter', 'second-delimiter')

Where:

Argument Value Specifies Default value
time-format 1 Returns the time of day as hhdmmdss (d is the delimiter) 1
2 Returns the time of day as hhdmmdssdttt (d is the delimiter)  
first-delimiter 1 character only Character to place between time units HH, MM, and SS : (colon)
second-delimiter 1 character only, second-delimiter Character to place between time units SS and TTT . (period)

The second-delimiter applies only if time-format is 2. You must enclose the delimiters with single quotation marks.

You can suppress the first-delimiter or the second-delimiter character by using a single quoted null string. To suppress both delimiters, use two single quoted null strings separated by a comma.

Examples

$Time(argument) Returns...
$Time HH:MM:SS
$Time(1) HH:MM:SS
$Time(1,'-') HH-MM-SS
$Time(1,' ') HH MM SS
$Time(1,'') HHMMSS
$Time(2) HH:MM:SS.TTT
$Time(2,'-') HH-MM-SS.TTT
$Time(2,'','') HHMMSSTTT