Keith Medcalf wrote:
> Are you running Windows or Unix? I am sending this to you as I was just
looking
> into this again and although SQLite maintains time internally with a
millisecond
> precision, the API used on Windows to read the time is limited by the Clock
> Resolution (usually about 16.5 m
about anticipated traffic volume.
>-Original Message-
>From: sqlite-users [mailto:sqlite-users-
>boun...@mailinglists.sqlite.org] On Behalf Of danap
>Sent: Sunday, 1 July, 2018 12:38
>To: sqlite-users@mailinglists.sqlite.org
>Subject: [sqlite] Time Precision
>
>The
danap wrote:
> SELECT CAST((SELECT (julianday('now', 'localtime') -
> julianday('1970-01-01'))*24*60*60*1000) AS INTEGER);
Keith wrote:
> Are you sure you want to be mixing up timezones?
>
> julianday('1970-01-01') returns the julianday timestamp
> for 1970-01-01 00:00:00 GMT julianday('now', 'loc
rom: sqlite-users [mailto:sqlite-users-
>boun...@mailinglists.sqlite.org] On Behalf Of dmp
>Sent: Monday, 2 July, 2018 11:07
>To: sqlite-users@mailinglists.sqlite.org
>Subject: Re: [sqlite] Time Precision
>
>> Igor wrote:
>> select (julianday('now') - julianday(
> Igor wrote:
> select (julianday('now') - julianday('1970-01-01'))*24*60*60*1000
> Keith wrote:
> select (julianday() - 2440587.5) * 86400.0
Both of these got me on my way, Igor's a little more clearer. I'll
doing a little more checking to insure the solution below is correct,
but seems good. Th
Too long since I have coded for windows. BUT getting a accurate
time/interval from a loaded windows system is non-trivial.
The multimedia timers are ok (from memory).
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ailto:sqlite-users-
>boun...@mailinglists.sqlite.org] On Behalf Of danap
>Sent: Sunday, 1 July, 2018 12:38
>To: sqlite-users@mailinglists.sqlite.org
>Subject: [sqlite] Time Precision
>
>The time precision treated with and defined, ISO-8601, seems to be
>with regard to seconds. St
to:sqlite-users-
>boun...@mailinglists.sqlite.org] On Behalf Of danap
>Sent: Sunday, 1 July, 2018 12:38
>To: sqlite-users@mailinglists.sqlite.org
>Subject: [sqlite] Time Precision
>
>The time precision treated with and defined, ISO-8601, seems to be
>with regard to seconds. Storage of an I
On 7/1/2018 2:37 PM, danap wrote:
The time precision treated with and defined, ISO-8601, seems to be
with regard to seconds. Storage of an Integer for time as an example
in SQLite:
sqlite> SELECT STRFTIME('%s', 'now', 'localtime');
1530446557
A 10 digit value. The issue I'm having is with regar
The time precision treated with and defined, ISO-8601, seems to be
with regard to seconds. Storage of an Integer for time as an example
in SQLite:
sqlite> SELECT STRFTIME('%s', 'now', 'localtime');
1530446557
A 10 digit value. The issue I'm having is with regard to storage
of time, in millisecon
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