From 6a2adc45b7445c608d42a084044c3374a1a606a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Brandon W Maister Date: Fri, 22 Nov 2019 11:28:55 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Use markdown footnotes in strftime docs --- src/format/strftime.rs | 77 ++++++++++++++++++++++-------------------- 1 file changed, 40 insertions(+), 37 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/format/strftime.rs b/src/format/strftime.rs index d7cf68c76b..e9cf18d4d7 100644 --- a/src/format/strftime.rs +++ b/src/format/strftime.rs @@ -11,9 +11,9 @@ The following specifiers are available both to formatting and parsing. | Spec. | Example | Description | |-------|----------|----------------------------------------------------------------------------| | | | **DATE SPECIFIERS:** | -| `%Y` | `2001` | The full proleptic Gregorian year, zero-padded to 4 digits. [1] | -| `%C` | `20` | The proleptic Gregorian year divided by 100, zero-padded to 2 digits. [2] | -| `%y` | `01` | The proleptic Gregorian year modulo 100, zero-padded to 2 digits. [2] | +| `%Y` | `2001` | The full proleptic Gregorian year, zero-padded to 4 digits. [^1] | +| `%C` | `20` | The proleptic Gregorian year divided by 100, zero-padded to 2 digits. [^2] | +| `%y` | `01` | The proleptic Gregorian year modulo 100, zero-padded to 2 digits. [^2] | | | | | | `%m` | `07` | Month number (01--12), zero-padded to 2 digits. | | `%b` | `Jul` | Abbreviated month name. Always 3 letters. | @@ -28,12 +28,12 @@ The following specifiers are available both to formatting and parsing. | `%w` | `0` | Sunday = 0, Monday = 1, ..., Saturday = 6. | | `%u` | `7` | Monday = 1, Tuesday = 2, ..., Sunday = 7. (ISO 8601) | | | | | -| `%U` | `28` | Week number starting with Sunday (00--53), zero-padded to 2 digits. [3] | +| `%U` | `28` | Week number starting with Sunday (00--53), zero-padded to 2 digits. [^3] | | `%W` | `27` | Same to `%U`, but week 1 starts with the first Monday in that year instead.| | | | | -| `%G` | `2001` | Same to `%Y` but uses the year number in ISO 8601 week date. [4] | -| `%g` | `01` | Same to `%y` but uses the year number in ISO 8601 week date. [4] | -| `%V` | `27` | Same to `%U` but uses the week number in ISO 8601 week date (01--53). [4] | +| `%G` | `2001` | Same to `%Y` but uses the year number in ISO 8601 week date. [^4] | +| `%g` | `01` | Same to `%y` but uses the year number in ISO 8601 week date. [^4] | +| `%V` | `27` | Same to `%U` but uses the week number in ISO 8601 week date (01--53). [^4] | | | | | | `%j` | `189` | Day of the year (001--366), zero-padded to 3 digits. | | | | | @@ -52,15 +52,15 @@ The following specifiers are available both to formatting and parsing. | `%p` | `AM` | `AM` or `PM` in 12-hour clocks. | | | | | | `%M` | `34` | Minute number (00--59), zero-padded to 2 digits. | -| `%S` | `60` | Second number (00--60), zero-padded to 2 digits. [5] | -| `%f` | `026490000` | The fractional seconds (in nanoseconds) since last whole second. [8] | -| `%.f` | `.026490`| Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned. These all consume the leading dot. [8] | -| `%.3f`| `.026` | Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned but fixed to a length of 3. [8] | -| `%.6f`| `.026490` | Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned but fixed to a length of 6. [8] | -| `%.9f`| `.026490000` | Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned but fixed to a length of 9. [8] | -| `%3f` | `026` | Similar to `%.3f` but without the leading dot. [8] | -| `%6f` | `026490` | Similar to `%.6f` but without the leading dot. [8] | -| `%9f` | `026490000` | Similar to `%.9f` but without the leading dot. [8] | +| `%S` | `60` | Second number (00--60), zero-padded to 2 digits. [^5] | +| `%f` | `026490000` | The fractional seconds (in nanoseconds) since last whole second. [^8] | +| `%.f` | `.026490`| Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned. These all consume the leading dot. [^8] | +| `%.3f`| `.026` | Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned but fixed to a length of 3. [^8] | +| `%.6f`| `.026490` | Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned but fixed to a length of 6. [^8] | +| `%.9f`| `.026490000` | Similar to `.%f` but left-aligned but fixed to a length of 9. [^8] | +| `%3f` | `026` | Similar to `%.3f` but without the leading dot. [^8] | +| `%6f` | `026490` | Similar to `%.6f` but without the leading dot. [^8] | +| `%9f` | `026490000` | Similar to `%.9f` but without the leading dot. [^8] | | | | | | `%R` | `00:34` | Hour-minute format. Same to `%H:%M`. | | `%T` | `00:34:60` | Hour-minute-second format. Same to `%H:%M:%S`. | @@ -75,9 +75,9 @@ The following specifiers are available both to formatting and parsing. | | | | | | | **DATE & TIME SPECIFIERS:** | |`%c`|`Sun Jul 8 00:34:60 2001`|`ctime` date & time format. Same to `%a %b %e %T %Y` sans `\n`.| -| `%+` | `2001-07-08T00:34:60.026490+09:30` | ISO 8601 / RFC 3339 date & time format. [6] | +| `%+` | `2001-07-08T00:34:60.026490+09:30` | ISO 8601 / RFC 3339 date & time format. [^6] | | | | | -| `%s` | `994518299` | UNIX timestamp, the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00 UTC. [7] | +| `%s` | `994518299` | UNIX timestamp, the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00 UTC. [^7]| | | | | | | | **SPECIAL SPECIFIERS:** | | `%t` | | Literal tab (`\t`). | @@ -95,59 +95,62 @@ Modifier | Description Notes: -1. `%Y`: +[^1]: `%Y`: Negative years are allowed in formatting but not in parsing. -2. `%C`, `%y`: +[^2]: `%C`, `%y`: This is floor division, so 100 BCE (year number -99) will print `-1` and `99` respectively. -3. `%U`: +[^3]: `%U`: Week 1 starts with the first Sunday in that year. It is possible to have week 0 for days before the first Sunday. -4. `%G`, `%g`, `%V`: +[^4]: `%G`, `%g`, `%V`: Week 1 is the first week with at least 4 days in that year. Week 0 does not exist, so this should be used with `%G` or `%g`. -5. `%S`: +[^5]: `%S`: It accounts for leap seconds, so `60` is possible. -6. `%+`: - Same to `%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%.f%:z`, - i.e. 0, 3, 6 or 9 fractional digits for seconds and colons in the time zone offset. +[^6]: `%+`: Same as `%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%.f%:z`, i.e. 0, 3, 6 or 9 fractional + digits for seconds and colons in the time zone offset. +
+
+ The typical `strftime` implementations have different (and locale-dependent) + formats for this specifier. While Chrono's format for `%+` is far more + stable, it is best to avoid this specifier if you want to control the exact + output. - The typical `strftime` implementations have - different (and locale-dependent) formats for this specifier. - While Chrono's format for `%+` is far more stable, - it is best to avoid this specifier if you want to control the exact output. - -7. `%s`: +[^7]: `%s`: This is not padded and can be negative. For the purpose of Chrono, it only accounts for non-leap seconds so it slightly differs from ISO C `strftime` behavior. -8. `%f`, `%.f`, `%.3f`, `%.6f`, `%.9f`, `%3f`, `%6f`, `%9f`: - +[^8]: `%f`, `%.f`, `%.3f`, `%.6f`, `%.9f`, `%3f`, `%6f`, `%9f`: +
The default `%f` is right-aligned and always zero-padded to 9 digits for the compatibility with glibc and others, so it always counts the number of nanoseconds since the last whole second. E.g. 7ms after the last second will print `007000000`, and parsing `7000000` will yield the same. - +
+
The variant `%.f` is left-aligned and print 0, 3, 6 or 9 fractional digits according to the precision. E.g. 70ms after the last second under `%.f` will print `.070` (note: not `.07`), and parsing `.07`, `.070000` etc. will yield the same. Note that they can print or read nothing if the fractional part is zero or the next character is not `.`. - +
+
The variant `%.3f`, `%.6f` and `%.9f` are left-aligned and print 3, 6 or 9 fractional digits according to the number preceding `f`. E.g. 70ms after the last second under `%.3f` will print `.070` (note: not `.07`), and parsing `.07`, `.070000` etc. will yield the same. Note that they can read nothing if the fractional part is zero or the next character is not `.` however will print with the specified length. - +
+
The variant `%3f`, `%6f` and `%9f` are left-aligned and print 3, 6 or 9 fractional digits according to the number preceding `f`, but without the leading dot. E.g. 70ms after the last second under `%3f` will print `070` (note: not `07`),