Convert date to UNIX time
113 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
James
el 24 de Abr. de 2011
Editada: James Tursa
el 22 de Jul. de 2023
Hi,
What combination of date functions do I need to use to convert a date such as '24-Apr-2011' into UNIX time (and vice versa)?
I've been playing around with datenum, datestr and datetick but I can't figure it out
Thanks Dave
7 comentarios
Stephen23
el 22 de Jul. de 2023
Editada: Stephen23
el 22 de Jul. de 2023
" I was nevertheless surprised that matlab didn't have built-in routines to perform these two tasks (inputting and outputting a date as seconds ellapsed from a specific start date and time)."
Of course it does, you can find them listed in the MATLAB documentation:
TN = datetime('now');
S0 = seconds(TN - datetime(1970,1,1)) % Your approach
S1 = posixtime(TN) % inbuilt MATLAB function
S2 = convertTo(TN,'posix') % inbuilt MATLAB function
isequal(S0,S1,S2)
And if you really want to control the epoch and ticks per second (but lossy due to the numeric operations):
S3 = convertTo(TN,'epochtime','Epoch','1970-1-1', 'TicksPerSecond',1); % inbuilt MATLAB function
S3 = double(S3)
And the reverse conversion is easy too:
T0 = datetime(1970,1,1) + seconds(S0) % your approach
T1 = datetime(S0,'ConvertFrom','posix') % inbuilt MATLAB function
T2 = datetime(S0,'ConvertFrom', 'epochtime','Epoch','1970-1-1','TicksPerSecond',1) % inbuilt MATLAB function
The conversion to POSIX-double is lossy, so we do not expect exact equivalence (less than ns is not bad though):
milliseconds(T0-TN)
milliseconds(T1-TN)
milliseconds(T2-TN)
James Tursa
el 22 de Jul. de 2023
Editada: James Tursa
el 22 de Jul. de 2023
For completeness of this thread, I suppose I should add that this entire discussion with Unix Epoch of 1970-1-1 00:00 UTC assumes the redefinition of Unix Epoch using backwards extension of Modern UTC (TAI based), which didn't start until 1972. The original Unix Epoch based on Old UTC (UT based) is actually about 2 seconds different. But unless you are doing some type of historical work, you should use the redefinition with backwards extension of Modern UTC. The MATLAB datetime( ) function assumes this backwards extension. I am unaware of any MATLAB functions that use the Old UTC definition, so if you are doing historical work you will probably have to write your own conversion function.
Respuesta aceptada
Peter Perkins
el 28 de Sept. de 2015
In R2014b or later, use datetime:
>> d = datetime('24-Apr-2011')
d =
24-Apr-2011
>> posixtime(d)
ans =
1303603200
>> datetime(1303603200,'ConvertFrom','posixtime')
ans =
24-Apr-2011 00:00:00
Similar syntaxes for Excel serial date numbers, Julian date numbers, and not surprisingly MATLAB date numbers.
Hope this helps.
1 comentario
Brendan Hamm
el 27 de Feb. de 2018
Probably worth noting that time zone will have an effect as well as the offset from UTC plays a role in the appropriate conversion.
>> d1 = datetime('24-Apr-2011');
>> p1 = posixtime(d)
p1 =
1.303603200000000e+09
>> d2 = datetime('24-Apr-2011','TimeZone','America/New_York');
>> p2 = posixtime(d2)
p2 =
1.303617600000000e+09
Más respuestas (1)
Walter Roberson
el 24 de Abr. de 2011
int32(floor(86400 * (datenum('24-Apr-2011') - datenum('01-Jan-1970'))))
Note that both systems have the problem of not dealing with leap seconds.
Also, the int32() rather than uint32() is not an error: unix time was defined as a signed number.
5 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 28 de Sept. de 2015
Ah, my answer is for time_t in particular. I have never encountered a Unix system that used a different representation.
James Tursa
el 28 de Sept. de 2015
Yes, for time_t I agree that it is typically implemented as a signed 32-bit integer.
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Dates and Time en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!