I\'m trying to convert the string produced from the __DATE__
macro into a time_t
. I don\'t need a full-blown date/time parser, something that only han
I don't know if any other Arduino hackers will stumble upon this question, but I found @JerryCoffin's answer to be quite helpful in solving this problem for my project. Here is a complete example you can paste into Arduino. It uses the Time lib referenced here.
#include "Arduino.h"
#include
#include
time_t cvt_date(char const *date) {
char s_month[5];
int month, day, year;
tmElements_t tmel;
static const char month_names[] = "JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec";
sscanf(date, "%s %d %d", s_month, &day, &year);
month = (strstr(month_names, s_month)-month_names)/3+1;
tmel.Hour = tmel.Minute = tmel.Second = 0; // This was working perfectly until 3am then broke until I added this.
tmel.Month = month;
tmel.Day = day;
// year can be given as full four digit year or two digts (2010 or 10 for 2010);
//it is converted to years since 1970
if( year > 99)
tmel.Year = year - 1970;
else
tmel.Year = year + 30;
return makeTime(tmel);
}
void printdate(char const *date)
{
Serial.println((String)"cvt_date('" + date + "')");
time_t t = cvt_date(date);
Serial.println((String) month(t) + "-" + day(t) + "-" + year(t));
setTime(t);
Serial.println((String) month() + "/" + day() + "/" + year() + "\n");
}
void setup()
{
Serial.begin(9600); while (!Serial);
printdate(__DATE__); // works with the compiler macro
printdate("Jan 1 00"); // works with 2 digit years
printdate("Feb 28 01");
printdate("Mar 7 5"); // works with 1 digit years
printdate("Apr 10 1970"); // works from 1970
printdate("May 13 1980");
printdate("Jun 16 1990");
printdate("Jul 19 1997");
printdate("Aug 22 2000");
printdate("Sep 25 2010");
printdate("Oct 31 2014");
printdate("Nov 30 2020");
printdate("Dec 31 2105"); // through 2105
printdate("Dec 31 2106"); // fails at and after 2106
}
void loop(){
}
Here are the Serial Terminal results...
cvt_date('Oct 5 2014')
10-5-2014
10/5/2014
cvt_date('Jan 1 00')
1-1-2000
1/1/2000
cvt_date('Feb 28 01')
2-28-2001
2/28/2001
cvt_date('Mar 7 5')
3-7-2005
3/7/2005
cvt_date('Apr 10 1970')
4-10-1970
4/10/1970
cvt_date('May 13 1980')
5-13-1980
5/13/1980
cvt_date('Jun 16 1990')
6-16-1990
6/16/1990
cvt_date('Jul 19 1997')
7-19-1997
7/19/1997
cvt_date('Aug 22 2000')
8-22-2000
8/22/2000
cvt_date('Sep 25 2010')
9-25-2010
9/25/2010
cvt_date('Oct 31 2014')
10-31-2014
10/31/2014
cvt_date('Nov 30 2020')
11-30-2020
11/30/2020
cvt_date('Dec 31 2105')
12-31-2105
12/31/2105
cvt_date('Dec 31 2106')
11-23-1970
11/23/1970
If all you want is to use the __DATE__
and you don't need a time_t
or tmElements_t
object, the code can be much simpler.
void logname(char const *date, char *buff) {
int month, day, year;
static const char month_names[] = "JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec";
sscanf(date, "%s %d %d", buff, &day, &year);
month = (strstr(month_names, buff)-month_names)/3+1;
sprintf(buff, "%d%02d%02d.txt", year, month, day);
}
void setup()
{
Serial.begin(9600); while (!Serial);
Serial.print("log file name: ");
char filename[16];
logname(__DATE__, filename);
Serial.println(filename);
}
void loop(){
}
Here are the Serial Terminal results...
log file name: 20141009.txt