Scott Schmit <[email protected]> writes:
> On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 03:53:13PM -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>> Beat Bolli writes:
>> > + else if (mode == DATE_ISO8601_STRICT)
>> > + strbuf_addf(&timebuf, "%04d-%02d-%02dT%02d:%02d:%02d%+03d:%02d",
>> > + tm->tm_year + 1900,
>> > + tm->tm_mon + 1,
>> > + tm->tm_mday,
>> > + tm->tm_hour, tm->tm_min, tm->tm_sec,
>> > + tz / 100, abs(tz % 100));
>>
>> Wouldn't this misidentify a zone that is 30 minutes off of GMT,
>> i.e. tz == -30? tz/100 would not be negative and "%+03d:" would
>> happily show "+00:", no?
>
> No. strbuf_addf uses strbuf_vaddf which uses vsnprintf(3). From man
> vsnprintf(3):
>> The flag characters
>> The character % is followed by zero or more of the following
>> flags:
>>
>> + A sign (+ or -) should always be placed before a number
>> produced by a signed conversion. By default a sign is
>> used only for negative numbers. A + overrides a space if
>> both are used.
>
> Perhaps you misread "%+03d:" as "+%02d:"?
I do not think 03 vs 02 makes any difference wrt what I was
wondering.
You feed tz/100 to "%+03d:" (the "sign and hour" part of the
timezone). What if tz is -30, i.e. less than an hour but still a
negative offset? tz/100 would be zero and tz % 100 would be -30.
tz = -30;
printf("%+03d:%02d", tz / 100, abs(tz % 100));
would show what?
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in
the body of a message to [email protected]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html