strptime(3) — Linux manual page

NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | ATTRIBUTES | STANDARDS | HISTORY | NOTES | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

strptime(3) Library Functions Manual strptime(3)

NAME top

 strptime - convert a string representation of time to a time tm
 structure

LIBRARY top

 Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS top

 #define _XOPEN_SOURCE /* See feature_test_macros(7) */
 #include <time.h>
 char *strptime(const char *restrict s, const char *restrict format,
 struct tm *restrict tm);

DESCRIPTION top

 The strptime() function is the converse of strftime(3); it
 converts the character string pointed to by s to values which are
 stored in the "broken-down time" structure pointed to by tm, using
 the format specified by format.
 The broken-down time structure tm is described in tm(3type).
 The format argument is a character string that consists of field
 descriptors and text characters, reminiscent of scanf(3). Each
 field descriptor consists of a % character followed by another
 character that specifies the replacement for the field descriptor.
 All other characters in the format string must have a matching
 character in the input string, except for whitespace, which
 matches zero or more whitespace characters in the input string.
 There should be whitespace or other alphanumeric characters
 between any two field descriptors.
 The strptime() function processes the input string from left to
 right. Each of the three possible input elements (whitespace,
 literal, or format) are handled one after the other. If the input
 cannot be matched to the format string, the function stops. The
 remainder of the format and input strings are not processed.
 The supported input field descriptors are listed below. In case a
 text string (such as the name of a day of the week or a month
 name) is to be matched, the comparison is case insensitive. In
 case a number is to be matched, leading zeros are permitted but
 not required.
 %% The % character.
 %a or %A
 The name of the day of the week according to the current
 locale, in abbreviated form or the full name.
 %b or %B or %h
 The month name according to the current locale, in
 abbreviated form or the full name.
 %c The date and time representation for the current locale.
 %C The century number (0–99).
 %d or %e
 The day of month (1–31).
 %D Equivalent to %m/%d/%y. (This is the American style date,
 very confusing to non-Americans, especially since %d/%m/%y
 is widely used in Europe. The ISO 8601 standard format is
 %Y-%m-%d.)
 %H The hour (0–23).
 %I The hour on a 12-hour clock (1–12).
 %j The day number in the year (1–366).
 %m The month number (1–12).
 %M The minute (0–59).
 %n Arbitrary whitespace.
 %p The locale's equivalent of AM or PM. (Note: there may be
 none.)
 %r The 12-hour clock time (using the locale's AM or PM). In
 the POSIX locale equivalent to %I:%M:%S %p. If t_fmt_ampm
 is empty in the LC_TIME part of the current locale, then
 the behavior is undefined.
 %R Equivalent to %H:%M.
 %S The second (0–60; 60 may occur for leap seconds; earlier
 also 61 was allowed).
 %t Arbitrary whitespace.
 %T Equivalent to %H:%M:%S.
 %U The week number with Sunday the first day of the week
 (0–53). The first Sunday of January is the first day of
 week 1.
 %w The ordinal number of the day of the week (0–6), with
 Sunday = 0.
 %W The week number with Monday the first day of the week
 (0–53). The first Monday of January is the first day of
 week 1.
 %x The date, using the locale's date format.
 %X The time, using the locale's time format.
 %y The year within century (0–99). When a century is not
 otherwise specified, values in the range 69–99 refer to
 years in the twentieth century (1969–1999); values in the
 range 00–68 refer to years in the twenty-first century
 (2000–2068).
 %Y The year, including century (for example, 1991).
 Some field descriptors can be modified by the E or O modifier
 characters to indicate that an alternative format or specification
 should be used. If the alternative format or specification does
 not exist in the current locale, the unmodified field descriptor
 is used.
 The E modifier specifies that the input string may contain
 alternative locale-dependent versions of the date and time
 representation:
 %Ec The locale's alternative date and time representation.
 %EC The name of the base year (period) in the locale's
 alternative representation.
 %Ex The locale's alternative date representation.
 %EX The locale's alternative time representation.
 %Ey The offset from %EC (year only) in the locale's alternative
 representation.
 %EY The full alternative year representation.
 The O modifier specifies that the numerical input may be in an
 alternative locale-dependent format:
 %Od or %Oe
 The day of the month using the locale's alternative numeric
 symbols; leading zeros are permitted but not required.
 %OH The hour (24-hour clock) using the locale's alternative
 numeric symbols.
 %OI The hour (12-hour clock) using the locale's alternative
 numeric symbols.
 %Om The month using the locale's alternative numeric symbols.
 %OM The minutes using the locale's alternative numeric symbols.
 %OS The seconds using the locale's alternative numeric symbols.
 %OU The week number of the year (Sunday as the first day of the
 week) using the locale's alternative numeric symbols.
 %Ow The ordinal number of the day of the week (Sunday=0), using
 the locale's alternative numeric symbols.
 %OW The week number of the year (Monday as the first day of the
 week) using the locale's alternative numeric symbols.
 %Oy The year (offset from %C) using the locale's alternative
 numeric symbols.

RETURN VALUE top

 The return value of the function is a pointer to the first
 character not processed in this function call. In case the input
 string contains more characters than required by the format
 string, the return value points right after the last consumed
 input character. In case the whole input string is consumed, the
 return value points to the null byte at the end of the string. If
 strptime() fails to match all of the format string and therefore
 an error occurred, the function returns NULL.

ATTRIBUTES top

 For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see
 attributes(7).
 ┌───────────────────────────┬───────────────┬────────────────────┐
 │ Interface Attribute Value │
 ├───────────────────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────┤
 │ strptime() │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe env locale │
 └───────────────────────────┴───────────────┴────────────────────┘

STANDARDS top

 POSIX.1-2008.

HISTORY top

 POSIX.1-2001, SUSv2.

NOTES top

 In principle, this function does not initialize tm but stores only
 the values specified. This means that tm should be initialized
 before the call. Details differ a bit between different UNIX
 systems. The glibc implementation does not touch those fields
 which are not explicitly specified, except that it recomputes the
 tm_wday and tm_yday field if any of the year, month, or day
 elements changed.
 The 'y' (year in century) specification is taken to specify a year
 in the range 1950–2049 by glibc 2.0. It is taken to be a year in
 1969–2068 since glibc 2.1.
 glibc notes
 For reasons of symmetry, glibc tries to support for strptime() the
 same format characters as for strftime(3). (In most cases, the
 corresponding fields are parsed, but no field in tm is changed.)
 This leads to
 %F Equivalent to %Y-%m-%d, the ISO 8601 date format.
 %g The year corresponding to the ISO week number, but without
 the century (0–99).
 %G The year corresponding to the ISO week number. (For
 example, 1991.)
 %u The day of the week as a decimal number (1–7, where Monday
 = 1).
 %V The ISO 8601:1988 week number as a decimal number (1–53).
 If the week (starting on Monday) containing 1 January has
 four or more days in the new year, then it is considered
 week 1. Otherwise, it is the last week of the previous
 year, and the next week is week 1.
 %z An RFC-822/ISO 8601 standard timezone specification.
 %Z The timezone name.
 Similarly, because of GNU extensions to strftime(3), %k is
 accepted as a synonym for %H, and %l should be accepted as a
 synonym for %I, and %P is accepted as a synonym for %p. Finally
 %s The number of seconds since the Epoch, 1970年01月01日 00:00:00
 +0000 (UTC). Leap seconds are not counted unless leap
 second support is available.
 The glibc implementation does not require whitespace between two
 field descriptors.

EXAMPLES top

 The following example demonstrates the use of strptime() and
 strftime(3).
 #define _XOPEN_SOURCE
 #include <stdio.h>
 #include <stdlib.h>
 #include <string.h>
 #include <time.h>
 int
 main(void)
 {
 struct tm tm;
 char buf[255];
 memset(&tm, 0, sizeof(tm));
 strptime("2001-11-12 18:31:01", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", &tm);
 strftime(buf, sizeof(buf), "%d %b %Y %H:%M", &tm);
 puts(buf);
 exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
 }

SEE ALSO top

 time(2), getdate(3), scanf(3), setlocale(3), strftime(3)

COLOPHON top

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