Stewart Gordon Wrote: > > Read the source of std.date and see for yourself. If it's getting it > wrong, it suggests either your system is misconfigured or you're using > it wrongly. But since you still haven't posted your code, I still can't > comment further. > > Stewart.
Thank you so much again. Actually I just tried the example based on the one inside the std.date source: /************************************* * Converts UTC time into a text string of the form: * "Www Mmm dd hh:mm:ss GMT+-TZ yyyy". * For example, "Tue Apr 02 02:04:57 GMT-0800 1996". * If time is invalid, i.e. is d_time_nan, * the string "Invalid date" is returned. * * Example: * ------------------------------------ */ d_time lNow; string lNowString;//char[] lNowString; // Grab the date and time relative to UTC lNow = std.date.getUTCtime(); // Convert this into the local date and time for display. lNowString = std.date.toString(lNow); /* ------------------------------------ */ //And add testing below: d_time localTime=std.date.UTCtoLocalTime(lNow); string localTimeString=std.date.toString(localTime); writefln(lNowString); writefln(localTimeString); =========== output: =========== Wed Jul 15 01:47:42 GMT+0000 2009 Wed Jul 15 01:47:42 GMT+0000 2009