I am using below code
TZ=Etc/GMT+169 date '+%m/%d/%Y'
but above code print the current date
the Idea is I want to go behind 7+ more days in unix system for that I am just adding 24 to GMT It is working for 6 days only. If I increase GMT value after 169 it is printing current date.
Related
I have a tableau worksheet that shows a count of records by date. Current system date is Mar 14 but my dataset has data only till Mar 9. Is it possible to show dates from Mar 10 - Mar 14 even though there is no data for this time frame.
Given is a snapshot of my worksheet, kindly let me know how could I include all dates in the row even though there is no data for this time period.
Select discrete row it will show the date on a sheet
I need to assign a variable with the value in the format YYYYMM e.g for today run the previous month values should be generated as
Var1 = 201607
Is there any in build method available? Could you share the steps to generate this?
The trick in these cases is to subtract one month from the day 15 of the current month:
$ date --date="$(date +%Y-%m-15) - 1 month"
Fri Jul 15 00:00:00 CEST 2016
Then it is just a matter of using the proper format:
$ date --date="$(date +%Y-%m-15) - 1 month" "+%Y%m"
201607
To store the value in a var, just use the common var=$(command) syntax.
From GNU Coreutils → 28.7 Relative items in date strings:
The fuzz in units can cause problems with relative items. For example,
‘2003-07-31 -1 month’ might evaluate to 2003-07-01, because 2003-06-31
is an invalid date. To determine the previous month more reliably, you
can ask for the month before the 15th of the current month. For
example:
$ date -R
Thu, 31 Jul 2003 13:02:39 -0700
$ date --date='-1 month' +'Last month was %B?'
Last month was July?
$ date --date="$(date +%Y-%m-15) -1 month" +'Last month was %B!'
Last month was June!
Also, take care when manipulating dates around clock changes such as
daylight saving leaps. In a few cases these have added or subtracted
as much as 24 hours from the clock, so it is often wise to adopt
universal time by setting the TZ environment variable to ‘UTC0’ before
embarking on calendrical calculations.
I am working with an API that generates time periods based on a configured set of parameters.
So for example, I can specify I want 12 one month periods starting Jan 1st at midnight, and therefore the API will generate 12 monthly periods
01 Jan 2016 00:00:00 – 31 Jan 2016 23:59:59
01 Feb 2016 00:00:00 – 28 Feb 2016 23:59:59
Through to
01 Dec 2016 00:00:00 – 31 Dec 2016 23:59:59
Now the API expects a start date param supplied for the sequence of periods to be an ISO formatted string in UTC. So I’m currently in the UK, therefore if I choose to start the monthly periods from Jan 1st 2016 this would be 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z and is what I supply to the API call I am making to say when the first instance of my monthly periods should begin.
So now if I view the start and end dates of the generated monthly periods via the API, I will see them come back as
2016-01-01T00:00:00Z - 2016-01-31T23:59:59Z
2016-02-01T00:00:00Z - 2016-02-28T23:59:59Z
Etc to
2016-12-01T00:00:00Z - 2016-12-31T23:59:59Z
Something struck me about these generated periods and that is I want them to begin at midnight for where I currently am, but a period that is affected by GMT Daylight Time, so say my April period will look like so in the generated period from the API
2016-04-01T00:00:00Z - 2016-04-30T23:59:59Z
Parsing the start date for the above into a date object for viewing in the client (on my machine) will show up as
Fri Apr 01 2016 01:00:00 GMT+0100 (GMT Daylight Time)
So it’s saying that period starts at 1am and not midnight.
Now say if I wanted 12 months to be generated from 1st Jun when Daylight Savings is in effect.
My client side code currently will supply a start date to the API of 2016-05-31T23:00:00Z. This causes the API to generate start dates for each monthly period as being
2016-05-31T23:00:00Z - 2016-06-31T22:59:59Z (June Period)
2016-06-31T23:00:00Z - 2016-07-31T22:59:59Z (July)
Etc to
2017-04-30T23:00:00Z - 2017-05-31T22:59:59Z (May)
But now for a period that is not in GMT Daylight Time, so Jan for example it will show up as
2016-12-31T23:00:00Z - 2017-01-31T22:59:59Z
Meaning my client will see that start date as
Sat Dec 31 2016 23:00:00 GMT+0000 (GMT Standard Time)
So not Jan 1st at 00:00
Does this suggest that the API should know about the users timezone so the period generation logic in the API can factor this is when calculating the start and end dates?
Maybe I'm over thinking things here?!
The only real question I see here is:
Does this suggest that the API should know about the users timezone so the period generation logic in the API can factor this is when calculating the start and end dates?
In general, the answer is YES. Any time you are mapping calendar dates back to specific instants in time, then by definition you must involve time zones. That time zone can be that of the user's, or of some specific business location, or fixed to UTC, but they indeed part of the logic.
Consider that not every calendar date has a valid local "midnight" in every time zone. An example is 2015-10-18 in Sao Paulo Brazil, where the first moment of that day was 1:00 AM due to their spring-forward daylight saving time transition. There are many other examples of this around the world.
The only way to avoid the problem entirely is to not deal in specific times. If you are only working with whole dates, then your code can certainly compute the exact dates of each month without knowing anything about time zones. 2016-01-01 through 2016-01-31 has no awareness of time or time zone. It's only when you try to ask what the current date is, or if now is within that range, or if some other specific instant in time is within that range that you have to start thinking about time zones.
I have a field containing what should be a UNIX time stamp. As an example one value is 1408675380
Now when I do various online conversions, it shows the right day (22nd August) but shows the incorrect time. It should be around 21:00 or so but instead shows 02:43:00 GMT
Likewise, 1408676520 shows the correct day (22nd August) but instead of showing a time of around 22:00/23:00 it shows 03:02:00 GMT
I have no control over the data at all - just wondering if there's something obvious I'm missing?
1408849260 - Sunday, August 24th 2014, 03:01:00 (GMT) - Correct day, around 18 hours too early
1408850640 - Sunday, August 24th 2014, 03:24:00 (GMT) - Correct day, around 18 hours too early
Thanks,
JJ
Is your data in some other timezone than GMT ? something like GMT-5 (america west cost maybe ?)
I've been working on facebook application. But I've faced with strange bug(?).
It I'm trying to get detailed info about any event using graph api start_date differs from the one if I'm trying to get it using fql. for example:
https://graph.facebook.com/209798352393506/ - start date is 2011-05-26T19:00:00
https://api.facebook.com/method/fql.query?query=select%20eid%2C%20name%2C%20tagline%2C%20pic%2C%20host%20%2C%20start_time%20from%20event%20where%20eid%20%3D209798352393506 - start time is 1306461600. Which in human readable format equals to Fri, 27 May 2011 02:00:00 GMT.
As you can see difference between got dates is 5 hours. Somtimes I'm getting dates which differ for 8 hours, sometimes - 6.
Correct date is the first one:
http://www.facebook.com/events/209798352393506/
I can't figure out what happens. All events I'm trying to view are from Denmark. My timezone is Europe/Kiev. Difference is 1 hour.
Is this a facebook's bug? Or documented feature? Or am I doing something wrong?
Link to the documentation or another answer in stackoverflow would be enough.
Here is two events
http://www.facebook.com/events/290600150977115/ - starts on 2012-03-22 at 20:00
http://www.facebook.com/events/289501924395338/ - starts on 2012-03-03 at 21:00
But. Using FQL I'm getting that first event starts on 2012-03-23 at 04:00. Difference is 8 hours. And the second one starts on 2012-03-04 at 06:00. In this case difference is 9 hours. Why???
It was because of daylight saving time.
Time difference between me and facebook(Los Angeles) sometimes was 8 sometimes 9 hours, because there was a moment when Denmakr alredy changed their time to summer time and los angeles - not.
The problem occured when event started "in winter time" and finished in summer time. In this case I needed to add one hour.
Facebook is weird.
From /fql/insights/
The end of the period during which the metrics were collected, expressed as a unix time (which should always be midnight, Pacific Daylight Time) or using the function end_time_date() which takes a date string in 'YYYY-MM-DD' format.
2011-05-26T19:00:00 ===> 2011-05-26T19:00:00 PDT ===> Fri, 27 May 2011 02:00:00 GMT.