Converting date format (programming) Thread poster: Samuel Murray
| Samuel Murray Netherlands Local time: 08:00 Member (2006) English to Afrikaans + ...
Hello everyone I have a date code and I don't know what date code method is being used, but basically, [dddd, MMMM Do YYYY] yields [Sunday, December 10th 2023]. I need the code for [Sunday 10 December 2023]. Does anyone have a URL for this one? Thanks Samuel | | | Samuel Murray Netherlands Local time: 08:00 Member (2006) English to Afrikaans + ... TOPIC STARTER | Dan Lucas United Kingdom Local time: 07:00 Member (2014) Japanese to English
Samuel, not quite clear what you're trying to achieve here. Do you mean you need a formatting string to take a date and return a version in the format of "Sunday, December 10th 2023"? And is this for use within a CAT tool, some actual code, or some kind of utility...? The page to which you link is very specific - some kind of date-handling library. Dan | | | Try this ... ? | Dec 19, 2023 |
As Dan points out, it would help enormously to know what 'language' we're dealing with. That said, if [dddd, MMMM Do YYYY] yields [Sunday, December 10th 2023], then we can deduce with a fair degree of confidence, that dddd represents the full name of the day of the week ('Sunday', as opposed to 'Sun.'), MMMM represents the long name of the month (December), D followed by o is the day number (with no leading zero, otherwise it would probably ... See more As Dan points out, it would help enormously to know what 'language' we're dealing with. That said, if [dddd, MMMM Do YYYY] yields [Sunday, December 10th 2023], then we can deduce with a fair degree of confidence, that dddd represents the full name of the day of the week ('Sunday', as opposed to 'Sun.'), MMMM represents the long name of the month (December), D followed by o is the day number (with no leading zero, otherwise it would probably be DD) and the suffixed o refers to the 'ordinal' number (10th) as distinct from the cardinal number (10), and YYYY is the four-digit year. If you want the cardinal day number '10' instead of the ordinal number '10th', I suggest it may well be either D (with no suffix), or maybe Dc. The punctuation is fed through 'as is' to the resulting date string. On the basis of my reasoning above, I'd wager a chocolate digestive biscuit on: [Sunday 10 December 2023] --> [dddd D MMMM YYYY] JL ▲ Collapse | | | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Converting date format (programming) Wordfast Pro | Translation Memory Software for Any Platform
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