On Wed, May 28, 2025 at 07:29:57AM +0200, Carsten Reith wrote:
> On Tue, May 27, 2025 at 03:22:56PM -0400, Allan Streib wrote:
> > On Tue, May 27, 2025, at 15:20, Allan Streib wrote:
> > > The man page for calendar says:
> > >
> > > Other lines should begin with a month and day.
> >
> > Sorry, fat fingered and sent before completing my thought.
> >
> > This implies that year is ignored. Looking at files in /usr/share/calendar
> > also supports this.
> >
> > Allan
> >
>
> As Richard, I missed the implication, especially as the description of the
> '-t'
> option discusses the year format.
>
> Maybe an additional sentence in the man page won't do no harm ?
>
>
> Index: calendar.1
> ===================================================================
> RCS file: /cvs/src/usr.bin/calendar/calendar.1,v
> diff -u -p -u -p -r1.45 calendar.1
> --- calendar.1 21 Feb 2025 19:04:34 -0000 1.45
> +++ calendar.1 28 May 2025 05:17:54 -0000
> @@ -130,7 +130,8 @@ A day without a month matches that day o
> A month without a day matches the first of that month.
> Two numbers default to the month followed by the day.
> Lines with leading tabs default to the last entered date, allowing
> -multiple line specifications for a single date.
> +multiple line specifications for a single date. A year can be specified, but
> +it will be ignored in the output.
> .Dq Easter
> (may be followed by a positive or negative integer) is Easter for this year.
> .Dq Paskha
>
hi.
i don;t understand the diff:
$ cat calendar
May 30 2025 It's the 30th
$ calendar
It's the 30th
$ calendar -t 20260530
It's the 30th
have i misunderstood the intent?
jmc