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std::wcsftime(3) C++ Standard Libary std::wcsftime(3)

NAME

std::wcsftime - std::wcsftime

Synopsis


Defined in header <cwchar>
std::size_t wcsftime( wchar_t* str, std::size_t count, const wchar_t* format,
const std::tm* time );


Converts the date and time information from a given calendar time time to a
null-terminated wide character string str according to format string format. Up to
count wide characters are written.

Parameters


str - pointer to the first element of the wchar_t array for output
count - maximum number of wide characters to write
format - pointer to a null-terminated wide character string specifying the format of
conversion
time - pointer to the date and time information to be converted


Format string


The format string consists of zero or more conversion specifiers and ordinary
characters (except %). All ordinary characters, including the terminating null
character, are copied to the output string without modification. Each conversion
specification begins with % character, optionally followed by E or O modifier
(ignored if unsupported by the locale), followed by the character that determines
the behavior of the specifier. The following format specifiers are available:


Conversion Explanation Used fields
specifier
% writes literal %. The full conversion specification
must be %%.
n writes newline character
(C++11)
t writes horizontal tab character
(C++11)
Year
Y writes year as a decimal number, e.g. 2017 tm_year
EY writes year in the alternative representation, e.g.平
(C++11) 成23年 (year Heisei 23) instead of 2011年 (year 2011) tm_year
in ja_JP locale
y writes last 2 digits of year as a decimal number (range tm_year
[00,99])
Oy writes last 2 digits of year using the alternative tm_year
(C++11) numeric system, e.g. 十一 instead of 11 in ja_JP locale
Ey writes year as offset from locale's alternative tm_year
(C++11) calendar period %EC (locale-dependent)
C writes first 2 digits of year as a decimal number tm_year
(C++11) (range [00,99])
EC writes name of the base year (period) in the locale's
(C++11) alternative representation, e.g. 平成 (Heisei era) in tm_year
ja_JP
writes ISO 8601 week-based year, i.e. the year that
contains the specified week.


G In ISO 8601 weeks begin with Monday and the first week tm_year, tm_wday,
(C++11) of the year must satisfy the following requirements: tm_yday


* Includes January 4
* Includes first Thursday of the year
writes last 2 digits of ISO 8601 week-based year, i.e.
the year that contains the specified week (range
[00,99]).
g tm_year, tm_wday,
(C++11) In ISO 8601 weeks begin with Monday and the first week tm_yday
of the year must satisfy the following requirements:


* Includes January 4
* Includes first Thursday of the year
Month
b writes abbreviated month name, e.g. Oct (locale tm_mon
dependent)
h synonym of b tm_mon
(C++11)
B writes full month name, e.g. October (locale dependent) tm_mon
m writes month as a decimal number (range [01,12]) tm_mon
Om writes month using the alternative numeric system, e.g. tm_mon
(C++11) 十二 instead of 12 in ja_JP locale
Week
U writes week of the year as a decimal number (Sunday is tm_year, tm_wday,
the first day of the week) (range [00,53]) tm_yday
OU writes week of the year, as by %U, using the tm_year, tm_wday,
(C++11) alternative numeric system, e.g. 五十二 instead of 52 tm_yday
in ja_JP locale
W writes week of the year as a decimal number (Monday is tm_year, tm_wday,
the first day of the week) (range [00,53]) tm_yday
OW writes week of the year, as by %W, using the tm_year, tm_wday,
(C++11) alternative numeric system, e.g. 五十二 instead of 52 tm_yday
in ja_JP locale
writes ISO 8601 week of the year (range [01,53]).


V In ISO 8601 weeks begin with Monday and the first week tm_year, tm_wday,
(C++11) of the year must satisfy the following requirements: tm_yday


* Includes January 4
* Includes first Thursday of the year
OV writes week of the year, as by %V, using the tm_year, tm_wday,
(C++11) alternative numeric system, e.g. 五十二 instead of 52 tm_yday
in ja_JP locale
Day of the year/month
j writes day of the year as a decimal number (range tm_yday
[001,366])
d writes day of the month as a decimal number (range tm_mday
[01,31])
writes zero-based day of the month using the
Od alternative numeric system, e.g. 二十七 instead of 27
(C++11) in ja_JP locale tm_mday


Single character is preceded by a space.
writes day of the month as a decimal number (range
e [1,31]). tm_mday
(C++11)
Single digit is preceded by a space.
writes one-based day of the month using the alternative
Oe numeric system, e.g. 二十七 instead of 27 in ja_JP
(C++11) locale tm_mday


Single character is preceded by a space.
Day of the week
a writes abbreviated weekday name, e.g. Fri (locale tm_wday
dependent)
A writes full weekday name, e.g. Friday (locale tm_wday
dependent)
w writes weekday as a decimal number, where Sunday is 0 tm_wday
(range [0-6])
Ow writes weekday, where Sunday is 0, using the
(C++11) alternative numeric system, e.g. 二 instead of 2 in tm_wday
ja_JP locale
u writes weekday as a decimal number, where Monday is 1 tm_wday
(C++11) (ISO 8601 format) (range [1-7])
Ou writes weekday, where Monday is 1, using the
(C++11) alternative numeric system, e.g. 二 instead of 2 in tm_wday
ja_JP locale
Hour, minute, second
H writes hour as a decimal number, 24 hour clock (range tm_hour
[00-23])
OH writes hour from 24-hour clock using the alternative tm_hour
(C++11) numeric system, e.g. 十八 instead of 18 in ja_JP locale
I writes hour as a decimal number, 12 hour clock (range tm_hour
[01,12])
OI writes hour from 12-hour clock using the alternative tm_hour
(C++11) numeric system, e.g. 六 instead of 06 in ja_JP locale
M writes minute as a decimal number (range [00,59]) tm_min
OM writes minute using the alternative numeric system, tm_min
(C++11) e.g. 二十五 instead of 25 in ja_JP locale
S writes second as a decimal number (range [00,60]) tm_sec
OS writes second using the alternative numeric system, tm_sec
(C++11) e.g. 二十四 instead of 24 in ja_JP locale

Other


c writes standard date and time string, e.g. Sun Oct 17 all
04:41:13 2010 (locale dependent)
Ec writes alternative date and time string, e.g. using 平
(C++11) 成23年 (year Heisei 23) instead of 2011年 (year 2011) all
in ja_JP locale
x writes localized date representation (locale dependent) all
Ex writes alternative date representation, e.g. using 平
(C++11) 成23年 (year Heisei 23) instead of 2011年 (year 2011) all
in ja_JP locale
X writes localized time representation, e.g. 18:40:20 or all
6:40:20 PM (locale dependent)
EX writes alternative time representation (locale all
(C++11) dependent)
D equivalent to "%m/%d/%y" tm_mon, tm_mday,
(C++11) tm_year
F equivalent to "%Y-%m-%d" (the ISO 8601 date format) tm_mon, tm_mday,
(C++11) tm_year
r writes localized 12-hour clock time (locale dependent) tm_hour, tm_min,
(C++11) tm_sec
R equivalent to "%H:%M" tm_hour, tm_min
(C++11)
T equivalent to "%H:%M:%S" (the ISO 8601 time format) tm_hour, tm_min,
(C++11) tm_sec
p writes localized a.m. or p.m. (locale dependent) tm_hour
z writes offset from UTC in the ISO 8601 format (e.g.
(C++11) -0430), or no characters if the time zone information tm_isdst
is not available
writes locale-dependent time zone name or abbreviation,
Z or no characters if the time zone information is not tm_isdst
available

Return value


Number of wide characters written into the wide character array pointed to by str
not including the terminating L'\0' on success. If count was reached before the
entire string could be stored, 0 is returned and the contents are undefined.

Example

// Run this code


#include <ctime>
#include <cwchar>
#include <iostream>
#include <locale>


int main()
{
std::locale::global(std::locale("ja_JP.utf8"));
std::time_t t = std::time(nullptr);
wchar_t wstr[100];
if (std::wcsftime(wstr, 100, L"%A %c", std::localtime(&t)))
std::wcout << wstr << '\n';
}

Possible output:


火曜日 2011年12月27日 17時43分13秒

See also


strftime converts a std::tm object to custom textual representation
(function)
put_time formats and outputs a date/time value according to the specified format
(C++11) (function template)
C documentation for
wcsftime

2024.06.10 http://cppreference.com