Difference between revisions of "DateTime2ELTime s"
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Returns a numerical value indicating the time, including seconds, from the specified DateTime value. The time is indicated in the 24-hour ''HHmmss'' format, where 130000 = 1:00:00 PM. | Returns a numerical value indicating the time, including seconds, from the specified DateTime value. The time is indicated in the 24-hour ''HHmmss'' format, where 130000 = 1:00:00 PM. | ||
− | The integer portion of the DateTime value specifies the number of days since | + | The integer portion of the DateTime value specifies the number of days since December 30th, 1899, and the fractional portion of the DateTime value specifies the fraction of the day since midnight. |
== Usage == | == Usage == |
Latest revision as of 13:33, 15 February 2023
Returns a numerical value indicating the time, including seconds, from the specified DateTime value. The time is indicated in the 24-hour HHmmss format, where 130000 = 1:00:00 PM.
The integer portion of the DateTime value specifies the number of days since December 30th, 1899, and the fractional portion of the DateTime value specifies the fraction of the day since midnight.
Usage
DateTime2ELTime_s (DateTime)
Where:
- DateTime - a double-precision decimal DateTime value.
Notes
- Use ELTimeToDateTime_s or ELTimeToDateTime to convert a DateTime value to PowerLanguage's default time format of 130000 for 1:00:00 PM.
- Use DateTime2ELTime to convert a PowerLanguage time to a DateTime value without seconds precision.
Example
DateTime2ELTime_s(39449.646354167)
Will return a value of 153045, indicating 3:30:45 PM.