You should test this first. My test have a slightly different 'result' > So I could say "that appointment is at 2PM", convert it to a date and > time, and have it come up with "today at 2PM". Or 54 would be "the > time right now with the seconds equal to 54". 54 is the seconds, but not (time right now), just the (right HOUR now). Not sure how useful that is.
put 54 into tTime convert tTime to long time put tTime --> 16:00:54 until the next hour starts Jim Ault Las Vegas On 8/20/05 9:34 AM, "Mark Wieder" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Jeanne- > > Friday, August 19, 2005, 7:28:40 PM, you wrote: > >> Actually, it's not indeterminate. When you provide a number or other >> partial date or time, convert guesses what part you mean and fills in >> the rest with the current time. (For example, if you convert a time >> to long data and long time, you get today's date along with the time >> you specified.) This probably should be in the convert docs as a note. > > Cool. > I think. > So I could say "that appointment is at 2PM", convert it to a date and > time, and have it come up with "today at 2PM". Or 54 would be "the > time right now with the seconds equal to 54". _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
