VMS Help
CRTL, ctime
*Conan The Librarian
|
Converts a time in seconds, since 00:00:00 January 1, 1970, to an
ASCII string in the form generated by the asctime function.
Format
#include <time.h>
char *ctime (const time_t *bintim);
char *ctime_r (const time_t *bintim, char *buffer);
(ISO POSIX-1)
Compiling with the _DECC_V4_SOURCE and _VMS_V6_SOURCE feature-
test macros defined enables a local-time-based entry point to
this function that is equivalent to the behavior before OpenVMS
Version 7.0.
bintim
A pointer to a variable that specifies the time value (in
seconds) to be converted.
buffer
A pointer to a character array that is at least 26 bytes long.
This array is used to store the generated date-and-time string.
The ctime and ctime_r functions convert the time pointed to by
bintim into a 26-character string, and return a pointer to the
string.
The difference between the ctime_r and ctime functions is that
the former puts its result into a user-specified buffer. The
latter puts its result into thread-specific static memory
allocated by the Compaq C RTL, which can be overwritten by
subsequent calls to ctime or asctime; you must make a copy if
you want to save it.
On success, ctime returns a pointer to the string; ctime_r
returns its second argument. On failure, these functions return
the NULL pointer.
The type time_t is defined in the <time.h> header file as
follows:
typedef long int time_t
The ctime function behaves as if it called tzset.
NOTE
Generally speaking, UTC-based time functions can affect in-
memory time-zone information, which is processwide data.
However, if the system time zone remains the same during
the execution of the application (which is the common case)
and the cache of timezone files is enabled (which is the
default), then the _r variant of the time functions asctime_
r, ctime_r, gmtime_r, and localtime_r, is both thread-safe
and AST-reentrant.
If, however, the system time zone can change during the
execution of the application or the cache of timezone files
is not enabled, then both variants of the UTC-based time
functions belong to the third class of functions, which are
neither thread-safe nor AST-reentrant.
x A pointer to the 26-character ASCII string, if
successful.
NULL Indicates failure.