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Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates
From: |
PJ Weisberg |
Subject: |
Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates |
Date: |
Thu, 16 Dec 2010 13:34:51 -0800 |
On 12/16/10, Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com> wrote:
> question is "how do I find numbers that look like 1292527019, run a
> function on them, and then show the results of that function overlaid on
> top of the number without actually changing it in the buffer?"
Argh. I don't actually know how to do the visual-only thing, but that
problem is complicated by the fact that the string "December 16, 2010"
(for example) contains TWO Unix timestamps, both in the early morning
hours of January 1, 1970.
--
-PJ
- efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Ted Zlatanov, 2010/12/13
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Kevin Rodgers, 2010/12/16
- Message not available
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Ted Zlatanov, 2010/12/16
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Burton Samograd, 2010/12/16
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates,
PJ Weisberg <=
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Stefan Monnier, 2010/12/16
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Ted Zlatanov, 2010/12/16
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Stefan Monnier, 2010/12/16
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Eli Zaretskii, 2010/12/17
- Message not available
- Re: efficiently viewing Unix timestamps as dates, Ted Zlatanov, 2010/12/17