STRFTIME(3C)            Standard C Library Functions            STRFTIME(3C)
NAME
       strftime, strftime_l, cftime, ascftime - convert date and time to
       string
SYNOPSIS
       #include <time.h>       
size_t strftime(
char *restrict s, 
size_t maxsize,            
const char *restrict format,            
const struct tm *restrict timeptr);       
size_t strftime_l(
char *restrict s, 
size_t maxsize,            
const char *restrict format,            
const struct tm *restrict timeptr, 
locale_t loc);       
int cftime(
char *s, 
char *format, 
const time_t *clock);       
int ascftime(
char *s, 
const char *format,            
const struct tm *timeptr);
DESCRIPTION
       The 
strftime(), 
strftime_l(), 
ascftime(), and 
cftime() functions
       place bytes into the array pointed to by 
s as controlled by the
       string pointed to by 
format. The 
format string consists of zero or
       more conversion specifications and ordinary characters.  A conversion
       specification consists of a '
%' (percent) character and one or two
       terminating conversion characters that determine the conversion
       specification's behavior.  All ordinary characters (including the
       terminating null byte) are copied unchanged into the array pointed to
       by 
s. If copying takes place between objects that overlap, the
       behavior is undefined. For 
strftime(), no more than 
maxsize bytes are
       placed into the array. The 
strftime_l() function behaves identically
       to 
strftime() function, but instead of operating in the current
       locale, it operates in the locale specified by 
loc.
       If 
format is 
NULL, then the locale's default format is used.  For       
strftime() the default format is the same as 
%c; for 
cftime() and       
ascftime() the default format is the same as 
%+.  
cftime() and       
ascftime() first try to use the value of the environment variable       
CFTIME, and if that is undefined or empty, the default format is
       used.
       Each conversion specification is replaced by appropriate characters
       as described in the following list. The appropriate characters are
       determined by the 
LC_TIME category of the program's locale and by the
       values contained in the structure pointed to by 
timeptr for       
strftime() and 
ascftime(), and by the time represented by 
clock for       
cftime().       
%%             Same as 
%.       
%a             Locale's abbreviated weekday name.       
%A             Locale's full weekday name.       
%b             Locale's abbreviated month name.       
%B             Locale's full month name.       
%c             Locale's appropriate date and time representation.  In the C
             locale, this format is:
               %a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y
             Other locales may have different locale-specific formats.       
%C             Century number (the year divided by 100 and truncated to an
             integer as a decimal number [01,99]).       
%d             Day of month [01,31].       
%D             Date as 
%m/
%d/
%y.       
%e             Day of month [1,31]; single  digits are preceded by a space.       
%F             Equivalent to 
%Y-
%m-
%d (the ISO 8601:2000 standard date
             format).       
%g             Week-based year within century [00,99].       
%G             Week-based year, including the century [0000,9999].       
%h             Locale's abbreviated month name.       
%H             Hour (24-hour clock) [00,23].       
%I             Hour (12-hour clock) [01,12].       
%j             Day number of year [001,366].       
%k             Hour (24-hour clock) [0,23]; single digits are preceded by a
             space.       
%l             Hour (12-hour clock) [1,12]; single digits are preceded by a
             space.       
%m             Month number [01,12].       
%M             Minute [00,59].       
%n             Insert a NEWLINE.       
%p             Locale's equivalent of either a.m. or p.m.       
%r             Appropriate time representation in 12-hour clock format with             
%p.       
%R             Time as 
%H:
%M.       
%s             Seconds since 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970.       
%S             Seconds [00,60]; the range of values is [00,60] rather than
             [00,59] to allow for the occasional leap second.       
%t             Insert a TAB.       
%T             Time as 
%H:
%M:
%S.       
%u             Weekday as a decimal number [1,7], with 1 representing Monday.
             See 
NOTES below.       
%U             Week number of year as a decimal number [00,53], with Sunday as
             the first day of week 1.       
%v             Date as 
%e-
%b-
%Y.       
%V             The ISO 8601 week number as a decimal number [01,53]. In the
             ISO 8601 week-based system, weeks begin on a Monday and week 1
             of the year is the week that includes both January 4th and the
             first Thursday of the year.  If the first Monday of January is
             the 2nd, 3rd, or 4th, the preceding days are part of the last
             week of the preceding year.  See 
NOTES below.       
%w             Weekday as a decimal number [0,6], with 0 representing Sunday.       
%W             Week number of year as a decimal number [00,53], with Monday as
             the first day of week 1.       
%x             Locale's appropriate date representation.       
%X             Locale's appropriate time representation.       
%y             Year within century [00,99].       
%Y             Year, including the century (for example 1993).       
%z             Replaced by offset from UTC in ISO 8601:2000 standard format
             (
+hhmm or 
-hhmm), or by no characters if no time zone is
             determinable. For example, "-0430" means 4 hours 30 minutes
             behind UTC (west of Greenwich). If 
tm_isdst is zero, the
             standard time offset is used.  If 
tm_isdst is greater than
             zero, the daylight savings time offset if used. If 
tm_isdst is
             negative, no characters are returned.       
%Z             Time zone name or abbreviation, or no bytes if no time zone
             information exists.       
%+             Locale's date and time representation as produced by 
date(1).
       If a conversion specification does not correspond to any of the above
       or to any of the modified conversion specifications listed below, the
       behavior is undefined and 
0 is returned.
       The difference between 
%U and 
%W (and also between modified
       conversion specifications 
%OU and 
%OW) lies in which day is counted
       as the first of the week. Week number 1 is the first week in January
       starting with a Sunday for 
%U or a Monday for 
%W. Week number 0
       contains those days before the first Sunday or Monday in January for       
%U and 
%W, respectively.
   Modified Conversion Specifications
       Some conversion specifications can be modified by the 
E and 
O       modifiers to indicate that an alternate format or specification
       should be used rather than the one normally used by the unmodified
       conversion specification.  If the alternate format or specification
       does not exist in the current locale, the behavior will be as if the
       unmodified specification were used.       
%Ec              Locale's alternate appropriate date and time representation.       
%EC              Name of the base year (period) in the locale's alternate
              representation.       
%Eg              Offset from 
%EC of the week-based year in the locale's
              alternative representation.       
%EG              Full alternative representation of the week-based year.       
%Ex              Locale's alternate date representation.       
%EX              Locale's alternate time representation.       
%Ey              Offset from 
%EC (year only) in the locale's alternate
              representation.       
%EY              Full alternate year representation.       
%Od              Day of the month using the locale's alternate numeric symbols.       
%Oe              Same as 
%Od.       
%Og              Week-based year (offset from 
%C) in the locale's alternate
              representation and using the locale's alternate numeric
              symbols.       
%OH              Hour (24-hour clock) using the locale's alternate numeric
              symbols.       
%OI              Hour (12-hour clock) using the locale's alternate numeric
              symbols.       
%Om              Month using the locale's alternate numeric symbols.       
%OM              Minutes using the locale's alternate numeric symbols.       
%OS              Seconds using the locale's alternate numeric symbols.       
%Ou              Weekday as a number in the locale's alternate numeric symbols.       
%OU              Week number of the year (Sunday as the first day of the week)
              using the locale's alternate numeric symbols.       
%Ow              Number of the weekday (Sunday=0) using the  locale's alternate
              numeric symbols.       
%OW              Week number of the year (Monday as the first day of the week)
              using the locale's alternate numeric symbols.       
%Oy              Year (offset from 
%C) in the locale's alternate representation
              and using the locale's alternate numeric symbols.
   Selecting the Output Language
       These routines produce output that is formatted according to the       
LC_TIME locale category.  They use either the current locale, or in
       the case of 
strftime_l(), the locale supplied by 
loc.
   Time Zone
       Local time zone information is used as though 
tzset(3C) were called.
RETURN VALUES
       These functions return the number of characters placed into the array
       pointed to by 
s, not including the terminating null character. If the
       total number of resulting characters including the terminating null
       character is more than 
maxsize, 
strftime() returns 
0 and the contents
       of the array are indeterminate.
EXAMPLES
       Example 1: An example of the strftime() function.
       The following example illustrates the use of 
strftime() for the 
POSIX       locale. It shows what the string in 
str would look like if the
       structure pointed to by 
tmptr contains the values corresponding to
       Thursday, August 28, 1986 at 12:44:36.              
strftime(
str, 
strsize, "%A %b %d %j", 
tmptr);
       This results in 
str containing "Thursday Aug 28 240".
ATTRIBUTES
       See 
attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       |  ATTRIBUTE TYPE    | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       |CSI                 | Enabled         |
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       |Interface Stability | See below.      |
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       |MT-Level            | MT-Safe         |
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       |Standard            | See below.      |
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       The 
strftime() and 
strftime_l() functions are Standard.  
cftime() and       
ascftime() functions are Committed.
       For 
strftime() and 
strftime_l(), see 
standards(7).
SEE ALSO
       date(1), 
ctime(3C), 
mktime(3C), 
newlocale(3C), 
setlocale(3C),       
strptime(3C), 
tzset(3C), 
uselocale(3C), 
TIMEZONE(5), 
zoneinfo(5),       
attributes(7), 
environ(7), 
standards(7)NOTES
       The conversion specification for 
%V was changed in the Solaris 7
       release.  This change was based on the public review draft of the ISO
       C9x standard at that time. Previously, the specification stated that
       if the week containing 1 January had fewer than four days in the new
       year, it became week 53 of the previous year. The ISO C9x standard
       committee subsequently recognized that that specification had been
       incorrect.
       The conversion specifications for 
%g, 
%G, 
%Eg, 
%EG, and 
%Og were
       added in the Solaris 7 release.  This change was based on the public
       review draft of the ISO C9x standard at that time. The 
%g and 
%G       specifications were adopted in the formal standard.  The other two
       were not, and should not be used in portable applications.
       The conversion specification for 
%u was changed in the Solaris 8
       release.  This change was based on the XPG4 specification.
       If using the 
%Z specifier and 
zoneinfo timezones and if the input
       date is outside the range 20:45:52 UTC, December  13, 1901 to
       03:14:07 UTC, January 19, 2038, the timezone name may not be correct.
       The conversion specification for 
%+ was added in illumos.  It is not
       part of any standard, although it is available on a number of other
       platforms.  Its use is discouraged for conforming applications.
                              November 8, 2020                  STRFTIME(3C)