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Updated Examples and Recipes (markdown)
@@ -3,6 +3,7 @@ This page contains examples and recipes contributed by community members. Feel f
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##Contents
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- [The current local time](#localtime)
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- [The current time somewhere else](#elsetime)
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- [Get the current difference between any two arbitrary time zones](#deltatz)
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- [Obtaining a `time_point` from `y/m/d h:m:s` components](#time_point_to_components)
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- [Obtaining `y/m/d h:m:s` components from a `time_point`](#components_to_time_point)
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- [Normalizing `y/m/d` when it is `!ok()`](#normalize)
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@@ -71,6 +72,38 @@ This outputs the current time in Shanghai, for example:
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All IANA timezone names (or links -- aliases to timezones) are supported.
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<a name="deltatz"></a>
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### Get the current difference between any two arbitrary time zones
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(by [Howard Hinnant](https://github.com/HowardHinnant))
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Would you just like to know how many hours ahead or behind your friend is in another time zone? Here's how you do that with this library.
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#include "tz.h"
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#include <iostream>
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int
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main()
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{
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auto current_time = std::chrono::system_clock::now();
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auto la = date::make_zoned("America/Los_Angeles", current_time);
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auto sy = date::make_zoned("Australia/Sydney", current_time);
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std::cout << date::make_time(sy.get_local_time() - la.get_local_time()) << '\n';
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}
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Let's say you want to find out how many hours ahead Sydney is from LA (now). First get the current UTC time. Then create a `zoned_time` for both "America/Los_Angeles" and "Australia/Sydney" using that current UTC time. Then subtract their `local_time`s. `make_time` is a handy formatting tool for printing out that duration:
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17:00:00.000000
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Because we did not specify otherwise, the default behavior is to give us the full precision of `system_clock::time_point`. If you would prefer other behavior (e.g. minutes precision), that is easily accomplished with just a little more work. `using` directives make the code a little more readable:
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using namespace date;
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using namespace std::chrono;
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std::cout << make_time(floor<minutes>(sy.get_local_time() - la.get_local_time())) << '\n';
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And now the output is:
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17:00
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<a name="time_point_to_components"></a>
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### Obtaining a `time_point` from `y/m/d h:m:s` components
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(by [ecorm](https://github.com/ecorm))
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