Calculate day number from an unix-timestamp in a m

2019-02-22 00:58发布

问题:

How can i calculate day number from a unix-timestamp, in a mathematical way and without using any functions and in simple math formula.

1313905026 --> 8 (Today 08/21/2011)

回答1:

There is no simple formula to do this. You would need to subtract the number of years (accounting for leap years) since the epoch, which would probably require a loop or a discrete calculation of some kind. Then use some type of loop to subtract out the number of seconds in each month for the current year. What you are left with is the number of seconds currently into the month.

I would do something like this.

x = ...//the number of seconds
year = 1970

while (x > /*one year*/){
 x = x - /*seconds in january, and march-december*/
 if(year % 4 == 0){
  x -= /*leapeay seconds in february*/
 }else{
  x -= /*regular seconds in february*/
 }
}

//Then something like this:

if(x > /*seconds in january*/){
 x -= /*seconds in january*/
}
if(x > /*seconds in february*/){
 x -= /*seconds in january*/
}

.
.
.

//After that just get the number of days from x seconds and you're set.

Edit

I recommend using date functions for simplicity, but here is a possible non-loopy alternative answer in case anyone needs it, or would care to develop it further.

First let t be the current time in seconds since the epoch.

Let F be the number of seconds in four years. That is three regular years and one leap year. That should be: 126230400.

Now if you take away all of the time contributed by F, you will get a remainder: y.

So y = n % F.

There are several cases now: 1. y is less that one year 2. y is less than two years 3. y is less than three years and less than two months 4. y is less than three years and greater than two months 5. y is less than four years

Note that 1972 was a leap year, so if you count up by four from 1970, wherever you left off will be a leap year in two years.

let jan, feb, febLY, mar, may, ..., dec be the number of seconds in each month (you'd need to calculate it out).

d represents the day number of the current month and D represents the number of seconds in a day (86400). y represents the number of seconds in a regular year, and yLY represents the number of seconds in a leap year.

y = (t % F)
if(y < Y){
 if(y > jan){
  y -= jan
 }
 if(y > feb){
  y -= feb
 }
 .
 .
 .
 d = y % D
}
else if(y < 2 * y){
 y = y - Y
 if(y > jan){
  y -= jan
 }
 if(y > feb){
  y -= feb
 }
 .
 .
 .
 d = y % D
}
else if(y < 2 * y + yLY){
 y = y - 2 * Y
 if(y > jan){
  y -= jan
 }
 if(y > febLY){
  y -= febLY
 }
 .
 .
 .
 d = y % D
}
else{
 y = y - 2 * Y - yLY
 if(y > jan){
  y -= jan
 }
 if(y > feb){
  y -= feb
 }
 .
 .
 .
 d = y % D
}

Not tested. Also, since the Earth doesn't spin at EXACTLY 1 rotation / 24 hours, they've occasionally made adjustments to time. You need to do a bit of research factor that in.



回答2:

A unix timestamp doesn't include leap seconds, so we don't have to worry about that. Here is a branch-less1, loop-less algorithm for getting the y/m/d fields from a unix timestamp:

#include <iostream>

int
main()
{
    int s = 1313905026;
    int z = s / 86400 + 719468;
    int era = (z >= 0 ? z : z - 146096) / 146097;
    unsigned doe = static_cast<unsigned>(z - era * 146097);
    unsigned yoe = (doe - doe/1460 + doe/36524 - doe/146096) / 365;
    int y = static_cast<int>(yoe) + era * 400;
    unsigned doy = doe - (365*yoe + yoe/4 - yoe/100);
    unsigned mp = (5*doy + 2)/153;
    unsigned d = doy - (153*mp+2)/5 + 1;
    unsigned m = mp + (mp < 10 ? 3 : -9);
    y += (m <= 2);
    std::cout << m << '/' << d << '/' << y << '\n'; // 8/21/2011
}

This outputs:

8/21/2011

As you're not interested in y and m (only in d), you can eliminate the last couple of lines from the above computation.

This algorithm is described in excruciating detail here. The link includes a complete derivation, and unit tests spanning millions of years (which is overkill).


1 Branch-less: What looks like small branches in the algorithm above are optimized away by clang at -O3 on macOS:

__Z14get_day_numberi:                   ## @_Z14get_day_numberi
    .cfi_startproc
## BB#0:
    pushq   %rbp
Ltmp0:
    .cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
Ltmp1:
    .cfi_offset %rbp, -16
    movq    %rsp, %rbp
Ltmp2:
    .cfi_def_cfa_register %rbp
    movslq  %edi, %rax
    imulq   $-1037155065, %rax, %rcx ## imm = 0xFFFFFFFFC22E4507
    shrq    $32, %rcx
    addl    %ecx, %eax
    movl    %eax, %ecx
    shrl    $31, %ecx
    sarl    $16, %eax
    leal    (%rax,%rcx), %edx
    leal    719468(%rax,%rcx), %esi
    testl   %esi, %esi
    leal    573372(%rax,%rcx), %eax
    cmovnsl %esi, %eax
    cltq
    imulq   $963315389, %rax, %rcx  ## imm = 0x396B06BD
    movq    %rcx, %rsi
    shrq    $63, %rsi
    shrq    $32, %rcx
    sarl    $15, %ecx
    addl    %esi, %ecx
    imull   $146097, %ecx, %ecx     ## imm = 0x23AB1
    movl    %eax, %esi
    subl    %ecx, %esi
    subl    %eax, %esi
    leal    719468(%rsi,%rdx), %eax
    movl    %eax, %ecx
    shrl    $2, %ecx
    imulq   $1506180313, %rcx, %rdx ## imm = 0x59C67CD9
    shrq    $39, %rdx
    movl    %eax, %esi
    subl    %edx, %esi
    imulq   $963321983, %rcx, %rcx  ## imm = 0x396B207F
    shrq    $43, %rcx
    addl    %esi, %ecx
    movl    %eax, %edx
    shrl    $4, %edx
    imulq   $7525953, %rdx, %rdx    ## imm = 0x72D641
    shrq    $36, %rdx
    subl    %edx, %ecx
    imulq   $1729753953, %rcx, %rsi ## imm = 0x6719F361
    shrq    $32, %rsi
    movl    %ecx, %r8d
    subl    %ecx, %eax
    movl    %ecx, %edi
    movl    $3855821599, %edx       ## imm = 0xE5D32B1F
    imulq   %rcx, %rdx
    subl    %esi, %ecx
    shrl    %ecx
    addl    %esi, %ecx
    shrl    $8, %ecx
    imull   $365, %ecx, %ecx        ## imm = 0x16D
    subl    %ecx, %r8d
    shrl    $2, %edi
    imulq   $1506180313, %rdi, %rcx ## imm = 0x59C67CD9
    shrq    $39, %rcx
    shrq    $47, %rdx
    addl    %r8d, %eax
    subl    %ecx, %eax
    leal    (%rax,%rdx), %ecx
    leal    2(%rcx,%rcx,4), %esi
    movl    $3593175255, %edi       ## imm = 0xD62B80D7
    imulq   %rsi, %rdi
    shrq    $39, %rdi
    imull   $153, %edi, %edi
    subl    %edi, %esi
    leal    4(%rcx,%rcx,4), %ecx
    subl    %esi, %ecx
    movl    $3435973837, %esi       ## imm = 0xCCCCCCCD
    imulq   %rcx, %rsi
    shrq    $34, %rsi
    leal    1(%rax,%rdx), %eax
    subl    %esi, %eax
    popq    %rbp
    retq
    .cfi_endproc


回答3:

t = unix time
second = t MOD 60  
minute = INT(t / 60) MOD 60  
hour = INT(t / 60 / 60) MOD 24  
days = INT(t / 60 / 60 / 24)  
years = INT(days / 365.25)  
year = 1970 + years + 1

1970 started with a Thursday so, we can calculate the day of the week:

weekday = (days + 4) MOD 7

If Sunday is day 0. If you want Sunday to be day 1 just add 1.

Now, let's find out how many days we are into the year in question.

days = days - years * 365 - leapdays

Finally, we find the month and day of the month.

IF year MOD 4 = 0 THEN ly = 1 ELSE ly = 0
WHILE month <= 12
    month = month + 1
    IF month = 2 THEN
        DaysInMonth = 28 + NOT(year MOD 4) + NOT(year MOD 100)
            + NOT(year MOD 400)
    ELSE
        DaysInMonth = 30 + (month + (month < 7)) MOD 2
    END IF
    IF days > DaysInMonth THEN days = days - DaysInMonth
END WHILE

This assumes Boolean values of TRUE = 1, FALSE = 0, NOT TRUE = 0, and NOT FALSE = 1.

Now we have the year, month, day of the month, hour, minute, and second calculated with adjustments for leap years.