C++ Tutorial
C++ Date and Time
The C++
standard library does not provide a proper date type. C++ inherits the structs
and functions for date and time manipulation from C. To access date and time
related functions and structures, you would need to include <ctime>
header file in your C++ program.
There are
four time-related types: clock_t,
time_t, size_t, and tm.
The types clock_t, size_t and time_t are capable of representing the system
time and date as some sort of integer.
The
structure type tm holds the date and time in the form of
a C structure having the following elements:
struct tm {
int tm_sec; // seconds of minutes from 0 to 61
int tm_min; // minutes of hour from 0 to 59
int tm_hour; // hours of day from 0 to 24
int tm_mday; // day of month from 1 to 31
int tm_mon; // month of year from 0 to 11
int tm_year; // year since 1900
int tm_wday; // days since sunday
int tm_yday; // days since January 1st
int tm_isdst; // hours of daylight savings time
}
Following
are the important functions, which we use while working with date and time in C
or C++. All these functions are part of standard C and C++ library and you can
check their detail using reference to C++ standard library given below.
SN
|
Function
& Purpose
|
1
|
time_t
time(time_t *time);
This
returns the current calendar time of the system in number of seconds elapsed
since January 1, 1970. If the system has no time, .1 is returned.
|
2
|
char *ctime(const time_t
*time);
This
returns a pointer to a string of the form day
month year hours:minutes:seconds year\n\0.
|
3
|
struct tm *localtime(const
time_t *time);
This
returns a pointer to the tm structure representing local time.
|
4
|
clock_t clock(void);
This
returns a value that approximates the amount of time the calling program has
been running. A value of .1 is returned if the time is not available.
|
5
|
char * asctime ( const struct
tm * time );
This
returns a pointer to a string that contains the information stored in the
structure pointed to by time converted into the form: day month date
hours:minutes:seconds year\n\0
|
6
|
struct tm *gmtime(const
time_t *time);
This
returns a pointer to the time in the form of a tm structure. The time is
represented in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), which is essentially
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
|
7
|
time_t mktime(struct tm
*time);
This
returns the calendar-time equivalent of the time found in the structure
pointed to by time.
|
8
|
double difftime ( time_t
time2, time_t time1 );
This
function calculates the difference in seconds between time1 and time2.
|
9
|
size_t strftime();
This
function can be used to format date and time a specific format.
|
Current date and time:
Consider
you want to retrieve the current system date and time, either as a local time
or as a Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). Following is the example to achieve
the same:
#include <iostream>
#include <ctime>
using namespace std;
int main( )
{
// current date/time based on current system
time_t now = time(0);
// convert now to string form
char* dt = ctime(&now);
cout << "The local date and time is: " << dt << endl;
// convert now to tm struct for UTC
tm *gmtm = gmtime(&now);
dt = asctime(gmtm);
cout << "The UTC date and time is:"<< dt << endl;
}
When the
above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
The local date and time is: Sat Jan 8 20:07:41 2011
The UTC date and time is:Sun Jan 9 03:07:41 2011
Format time using
struct tm:
The tm structure is very important while
working with date and time in either C or C++. This structure holds the date
and time in the form of a C structure as mentioned above. Most of the time
related functions makes use of tm structure. Following is an example which
makes use of various date and time related functions and tm structure:
While
using structure in this chapter, I'm making an assumption that you have basic
understanding on C structure and how to access structure members using arrow
-> operator.
#include <iostream>
#include <ctime>
using namespace std;
int main( )
{
// current date/time based on current system
time_t now = time(0);
cout << "Number of sec since January 1,1970:" << now << endl;
tm *ltm = localtime(&now);
// print various components of tm structure.
cout << "Year: "<< 1900 + ltm->tm_year << endl;
cout << "Month: "<< 1 + ltm->tm_mon<< endl;
cout << "Day: "<< ltm->tm_mday << endl;
cout << "Time: "<< 1 + ltm->tm_hour << ":";
cout << 1 + ltm->tm_min << ":";
cout << 1 + ltm->tm_sec << endl;
}
When the
above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
Number of sec since January 1, 1970:1294548238
Year: 2011
Month: 1
Day: 8
Time: 22: 44:59
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