Andy,

You are welcome to use https://github.com/J-Sarnoff/UTime.jl

Pkg.clone("https://github.com/J-Sarnoff/UTime.jl";)
using UTime

localtime()
2016-07-27T14:41:37.497-04:00

ut()
2016-07-27T18:41:42Z

gmt() # gmt aliases ut
2016-07-27T18:41:45Z

alocaltime = localtime()
2016-07-27T14:42:04.282-04:00
ut(alocaltime)
2016-07-27T18:42:04.282Z

auniversaltime = ut()
2016-07-27T18:42:24Z
localtime(auniversaltime)
2016-07-27T14:42:24-04:00

julia> g=gmt(); g
2016-07-27T18:50:48Z

julia> year(g),month(g),day(g),hour(g),minute(g),second(g)
(2016,7,27,18,50,48)



There is more that one may do using UTime, take a look at the README 
examples.


It has been some time since I revisited it, so please ask if you have any 
questions, 
and let me know if there is something that is not now working as it had.
I just ran the examples above in v0.5-.

Regards, 
Jeffrey

On Wednesday, July 27, 2016 at 9:32:56 AM UTC-4, Andrew Gibb wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm writing a module for dealing with video timing. The C++ code I'm using 
> as a basis uses gmtime to convert seconds into y:m:d.etc. Does anyone know 
> if this functionality is exposed in Julia anywhere?
>
> I realise I could handle this myself with ccall, I just wanted to check to 
> see if I could avoid duplicating effort.
>
> Thanks
>
> Andy
>

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