可以将文章内容翻译成中文,广告屏蔽插件可能会导致该功能失效(如失效,请关闭广告屏蔽插件后再试):
问题:
What's the quickest way to convert a date in one format, say
2008-06-01
to a date in another format, say
Sun 1st June 2008
The important bit is actually the 'Sun' because depending on the dayname, I may need to fiddle other things around - in a non-deterministic fashion. I'm running GNU bash, version 3.2.17(1)-release (i386-apple-darwin9.0).
[Background: The reason that I want to do it from the command line, is that what I really want is to write it into a TextMate command... It's an annoying task I have to do all the time in textMate.]
回答1:
$ date -d '2005-06-30' +'%a %F'
Thu 2005-06-30
See man date
for other format options.
This option is available on Linux, but not on Darwin. In Darwin, you can use the following syntax instead:
date -j -f "%Y-%m-%d" 2006-06-30 +"%a %F"
The -f argument specifies the input format and the + argument specifies the output format.
As pointed out by another poster below, you would be wise to use %u (numeric day of week) rather than %a to avoid localization issues.
回答2:
Reading the date(1) manpage would have revealed:
-j Do not try to set the date. This allows you to use the -f flag
in addition to the + option to convert one date format to another.
回答3:
Thanks for that sgm. So just so I can come back to refer to it -
date -j -f "%Y-%m-%d" "2008-01-03" +"%a%e %b %Y"
^ ^ ^
parse using | output using
this format | this format
|
date expressed in
parsing format
Thu 3 Jan 2008
Thanks.
回答4:
date -d yyyy-mm-dd
If you want more control over formatting, you can also add it like this:
date -d yyyy-mm-dd +%a
to just get the Sun part that you say you want.
回答5:
date -d ...
doesn't seem to cut it, as I get a usage error:
usage: date [-jnu] [-d dst] [-r seconds] [-t west] [-v[+|-]val[ymwdHMS]] ...
[-f fmt date | [[[mm]dd]HH]MM[[cc]yy][.ss]] [+format]
I'm running GNU bash, version 3.2.17(1)-release (i386-apple-darwin9.0), and as far as the man goes, date -d is just for
-d dst Set the kernel's value for daylight saving time. If dst is non-
zero, future calls to gettimeofday(2) will return a non-zero for
tz_dsttime.
回答6:
If you're just looking to get the day of the week, don't try to match strings. That breaks when the locale changes. The %u
format give you the day number:
$ date -j -f "%Y-%m-%d" "2008-01-03" +"%u"
4
And indeed, that was a Thursday. You might use that number to index into an array you have in your program, or just use the number itself.
See the date and strftime man pages for more details. The date manpage on OS X is the wrong one, though, since it doesn't list these options that work.