std::asctime
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<ctime>
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|   char* asctime( const std::tm* time_ptr ); 
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Converts given calendar time std::tm to a textual representation. The resulting string has the following format:
Www Mmm dd hh:mm:ss yyyy
- 
Www- the day of the week (one ofMon,Tue,Wed,Thu,Fri,Sat,Sun). - 
Mmm- the month (one ofJan,Feb,Mar,Apr,May,Jun,Jul,Aug,Sep,Oct,Nov,Dec). - 
dd- the day of the month - 
hh- hours - 
mm- minutes - 
ss- seconds - 
yyyy- years 
The function does not support localization.
Contents | 
[edit] Parameters
| time_ptr | - | pointer to a std::tm object specifying the time to print | 
[edit] Return value
Pointer to a static null-terminated character string holding the textual representation of date and time. The string may be shared between std::asctime and std::ctime, and may be overwritten on each invocation of any of those functions.
[edit] Notes
This function returns a pointer to static data and is not thread-safe. POSIX marks this function obsolete and recommends std::strftime instead.
The behavior is undefined if the output string would be longer than 25 characters, if timeptr->tm_wday or timeptr->tm_mon are not within the expected ranges, or if timeptr->tm_year exceeds INT_MAX-1990.
Some implementations handle timeptr->tm_mday==0 as meaning the last day of the preceding month.
[edit] Example
#include <ctime> #include <iostream> int main() { std::time_t result = std::time(NULL); std::cout << std::asctime(std::localtime(&result)); }
Output:
Tue Dec 27 16:45:52 2011
[edit] See also
   converts a time_t object to a textual representation (function)  | 
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   converts a tm object to custom textual representation (function)  | 
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|    (C++11) 
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   formats and outputs a date/time value according to the specified format  (function template)  | 
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C documentation for asctime
 
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