[#393742] Getting the class of an object. — Ralph Shnelvar <ralphs@...32.com>

Consider;

14 messages 2012/03/06

[#393815] arcadia IDE requires tcl/tk and ruby-tk — Thufir Hawat <hawat.thufir@...>

which or where tcl and tk does arcadia require? Is this a gem which I

13 messages 2012/03/13

[#393952] What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...>

Hi!

18 messages 2012/03/21
[#393953] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

Active Support has recently added qualified_const_* methods to Module

[#393954] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

Ah, that won't work in 1.8.

[#393959] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 16:43, Xavier Noria <fxn@hashref.com> wrote:

[#393960] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 8:17 PM, Nikolai Weibull <now@bitwi.se> wrote:

[#393961] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 20:48, Xavier Noria <fxn@hashref.com> wrote:

[#393962] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 9:51 PM, Nikolai Weibull <now@bitwi.se> wrote:

[#393967] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...> 2012/03/22

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 22:11, Xavier Noria <fxn@hashref.com> wrote:

[#393969] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/22

On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 6:15 AM, Nikolai Weibull <now@bitwi.se> wrote:

[#394154] uninitialized constant SOCKSSocket — Resident Moron <lists@...>

I am running ruby 1.9.3 on a linux box. I would like to use

10 messages 2012/03/29

[#394160] Why z = Complex(1,2) rather than z = Complex.new(1,2)? — Ori Ben-Dor <lists@...>

What's this syntax, z = Complex(1,2), as opposed to z =

14 messages 2012/03/29

[#394175] shoes no such file to load -- rubygems — Mr theperson <lists@...>

I have installed shoes to develop GUI applications but when I try and

13 messages 2012/03/29

[#394201] Can't open url with a subdomain with an underscore — Jeroen van Ingen <lists@...>

I try to open the following URL: http://auto_diversen.marktplaza.nl/

10 messages 2012/03/30

[#394222] Ruby openssl ECC help plz — no name <lists@...>

I am confused on how to properly export public ECC key. I can see it

13 messages 2012/03/31

Re: Time. to_military_time?

From: Sylvester Keil <sylvester.keil@...>
Date: 2012-03-07 11:22:41 UTC
List: ruby-talk #393769
On Mar 7, 2012, at 10:00 AM, Robert Klemme wrote:

> Mario Trento wrote in post #1050518:
>> Is there any time function to get military time:
>> eg.
>>=20
>> tim=3D"0457"
>> Time.striptime(time,....)       =3D=3D> 16:57

Out of curiosity, isn't '0457' the same as 4:57 AM? If that's the case, =
then why wouldn't the regular date parser do the job:

$ irb
001:0> require 'time'
=3D> true
002:0> Time.strptime '0457', '%H%M'
=3D> 2012-03-07 04:57:00 0100
003:0> Time.strptime '1657', '%H%M'
=3D> 2012-03-07 16:57:00 0100

My apologies if I missed something obvious there!


> You can create a Time from individual fields:
>=20
> irb(main):004:0> Time.mktime 2012,3,10,10,11,12
> =3D> 2012-03-10 10:11:12 +0100
>=20
> You can use that to parse yourself and create the time object, e.g.
>=20
> def mt(s)
>  raise "Not military #{s.inspect}" unless /\A(\d{2})(\d{2})\z/ =3D~ s
>  h =3D ($1.to_i + 12) % 24 # correct?
>  m =3D $2.to_i
>  now =3D Time.now
>  Time.mktime now.year, now.month, now.day, h, m
> end
>=20
> irb(main):021:0> mt "0457"
> =3D> 2012-03-07 16:57:00 +0100
>=20
> Of course you can also change that to work with numbers if you prefer
>=20
> def mt(n)
>  raise "Not military #{s.inspect}" unless Integer =3D=3D=3D n
>  h, m =3D n.divmod 100
>  h =3D (h + 12) % 24 # correct?
>  now =3D Time.now
>  Time.mktime now.year, now.month, now.day, h, m
> end
>=20
> irb(main):029:0> mt 457
> =3D> 2012-03-07 16:57:00 +0100
>=20
> Please note that numbers with leading 0 are octal:
>=20
> irb(main):030:0> 0457
> =3D> 303
>=20
>> I found this sample below, it it works opposite, could not find any =
info
>> how to get reverse so I'll get military format:
>=20
>> def format_time(time)
>>  # normalize time
>>  time =3D time.to_s.rjust(4, '0') if time[0] !~ /[12]/
>>  time =3D time.to_s.ljust(4, '0') if time[0] =3D~ /[12]/
>> puts "New_time=3D" + time.to_s
>>=20
>>  Time.strptime(time, '%H%M').strftime('%l:%M').strip
>> end
>>=20
>> time =3D 1630
>> p format_time(time) # "4:30"
>=20
> That just looks awful since it works with strings instead using Time
> properly.
>=20
> Kind regards
>=20
> robert
>=20
> --=20
> Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
>=20


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