Up to [cvs.NetBSD.org] / pkgsrc / time / dateutils
Request diff between arbitrary revisions
Default branch: MAIN
Revision 1.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Mon Oct 21 15:05:05 2013 UTC (10 years, 6 months ago) by wiz
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: pkgsrc-2024Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2024Q1,
pkgsrc-2023Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2023Q4,
pkgsrc-2023Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2023Q3,
pkgsrc-2023Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2023Q2,
pkgsrc-2023Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2023Q1,
pkgsrc-2022Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2022Q4,
pkgsrc-2022Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2022Q3,
pkgsrc-2022Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2022Q2,
pkgsrc-2022Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2022Q1,
pkgsrc-2021Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2021Q4,
pkgsrc-2021Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2021Q3,
pkgsrc-2021Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2021Q2,
pkgsrc-2021Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2021Q1,
pkgsrc-2020Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2020Q4,
pkgsrc-2020Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2020Q3,
pkgsrc-2020Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2020Q2,
pkgsrc-2020Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2020Q1,
pkgsrc-2019Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2019Q4,
pkgsrc-2019Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2019Q3,
pkgsrc-2019Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2019Q2,
pkgsrc-2019Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2019Q1,
pkgsrc-2018Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2018Q4,
pkgsrc-2018Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2018Q3,
pkgsrc-2018Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2018Q2,
pkgsrc-2018Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2018Q1,
pkgsrc-2017Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2017Q4,
pkgsrc-2017Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2017Q3,
pkgsrc-2017Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2017Q2,
pkgsrc-2017Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2017Q1,
pkgsrc-2016Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2016Q4,
pkgsrc-2016Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2016Q3,
pkgsrc-2016Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2016Q2,
pkgsrc-2016Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2016Q1,
pkgsrc-2015Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2015Q4,
pkgsrc-2015Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2015Q3,
pkgsrc-2015Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2015Q2,
pkgsrc-2015Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2015Q1,
pkgsrc-2014Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2014Q4,
pkgsrc-2014Q3-base,
pkgsrc-2014Q3,
pkgsrc-2014Q2-base,
pkgsrc-2014Q2,
pkgsrc-2014Q1-base,
pkgsrc-2014Q1,
pkgsrc-2013Q4-base,
pkgsrc-2013Q4,
HEAD
Import dateutils-0.2.5 as time/dateutils. Dateutils are a bunch of tools that revolve around fiddling with dates and times in the command line with a strong focus on use cases that arise when dealing with large amounts of financial data. Dateutils commands are prefixed with a `d` but otherwise resemble known unix commands for reasons of intuition. The only exception being `strptime` which is analogous to the libc function of the same name.