timout_c |
Table of contents
Proceduretimout_c ( Time Output ) void timout_c ( SpiceDouble et, ConstSpiceChar * pictur, SpiceInt outlen, SpiceChar * output ) AbstractConvert an input epoch represented in TDB seconds past the TDB epoch of J2000 to a character string formatted to the specifications of a user's format picture. Required_ReadingTIME KeywordsTIME Brief_I/OVARIABLE I/O DESCRIPTION -------- --- -------------------------------------------------- et I Epoch in seconds past the ephemeris epoch J2000. pictur I A format specification for the output string. outlen I Maximum length of output string `output'. output O A string representation of the input epoch. Detailed_Inputet is a double precision representation of time in seconds past the ephemeris epoch J2000. pictur is a string that specifies how the output should be presented. The string is made up of various markers that stand for various components associated with a time. There are five types of markers that may appear in a format picture. These are String Markers, Numeric Markers, Meta markers, Modifier Markers and Literal Markers. The `pictur' string is examined and the various markers are identified. The output time string is constructed by replacing each of the identified markers with an appropriate time component. The various markers and their meanings are discussed in the -Particulars section below. Note that leading and trailing blanks in `pictur' are ignored. outlen is the maximum allowed length of the output string `output'. This length must be large enough to hold the output string plus the null-terminator character. If the output string is expected to have N characters, `outlen' should be at least N+1. Detailed_Outputoutput is a time string equivalent to the input epoch `et', matching the format specified by `pictur'. ParametersNone. Exceptions1) A leapseconds kernel must be loaded via the routine furnsh_c before calling this routine. If a leapsecond kernel has not been loaded, an error is signaled by a routine in the call tree of this routine. 2) If `pictur' contains the numeric marker "YYYY" and the magnitude of year is too large to be displayed as a four-digit integer, timout_c will replace it by "****". 3) If the requested precision is higher than 12 decimal places, timout_c will truncate the decimal part down to 12, and `output' will have all the remaining digits in the decimal part set to zero. 4) Double colon (::), when is not part of one of the supported markers, has no effect and will be presented as is on the output string. 5) If the `pictur' input string pointer is null, the error SPICE(NULLPOINTER) is signaled. 6) If the `pictur' input string has zero length, the error SPICE(EMPTYSTRING) is signaled. 7) If the `output' output string pointer is null, the error SPICE(NULLPOINTER) is signaled. 8) If the `output' output string has length less than two characters, the error SPICE(STRINGTOOSHORT) is signaled, since the output string is too short to contain one character of output data plus a null terminator. FilesA leapseconds kernel must be "loaded" via the routine furnsh_c prior to calling timout_c. ParticularsA format picture is simply a string of letters that lets timout_c know where various components of a time representation should be placed during creation of the time string. Here's an example of such a picture: MON DD,YYYY HR:MN:SC.#### (TDB) ::TDB Here is a sample of times that would be created by using this format. JAN 12,1992 12:28:18.2772 (TDB) FEB 13,1994 23:18:25.2882 (TDB) AUG 21,1995 00:02:00.1881 (TDB) As you can see from the samples above, the format picture specifies that every time string created should begin with a three-letter abbreviation for the month, followed by a space and the day of the month. The day of month is followed immediately by a comma and the year. The year component is followed by two spaces. The next outputs are hours represented as a two digit integer, a colon, minutes represented as a two digit integer, another colon, and seconds truncated to 4 decimal places and having a two digit integer part (rounding can be commanded; see the discussion of truncation and rounding below). This is followed by a space and the string "(TDB)". The special marker "::TDB" in the time picture is a ``invisible'' marker. It is used to specify the time system that should be used in creating the time string (in this case Barycentric Dynamical Time). timout_c does not recognize all of the parts of the time format picture in the example above. The list of recognized parts and unrecognized parts is shown in the table below. Recognized Unrecognized ---------- ------------ "MON" " " "DD" "," "YYYY" " " "HR" ":" "MN" "(TDB)" "SC" ".####" "::TDB" The unrecognized parts are called literal markers. They are copied exactly as they appear in `pictur' into the output string. The recognized parts of the picture are replaced by a component of time or, as in the case of "::TDB" are used as instructions about the overall properties of the time string. The full list of recognized markers, their classification and meaning are given below. MARKER CLASS MEANING ----------- -------- ----------------------------------------- ".##..." modifier represents a numeric component that immediately precedes this in a decimal format. Number of decimal places equals the number of '#' characters "::GCAL" meta dates are reported in Gregorian calendar "::JCAL" meta dates are reported in Julian calendar "::MCAL" meta dates after 15 October, 1582 are reported in Gregorian calendar; before that dates are reported in Julian calendar "::RND" meta round output to places specified by least significant component "::TDB" meta all components should be TDB "::TDT" meta all components should be TT (TDT) "::TT" meta all components should be TT (TDT) "::TRNC" meta truncate all output components (default) "::UTC" meta all components should be UTC (default) "::UTC+h:m" meta all components in UTC offset by +h (hours) and +m (minutes) so as to allow time zones. "::UTC-h:m" meta all components in UTC offset by -h (hours) and -m (minutes) so as to allow time zones. "AMPM" string String (either "A.M." or "P.M.") indicating whether hours are before or after noon. "ampm" string String (either "a.m." or "p.m.") indicating whether hours are before or after noon. "AP" numeric AM/PM equivalents of the hour component of a time. "DD" numeric Day of month "DOY" numeric Day of year "ERA" string String (either "B.C." or "A.D.") giving era associated with an epoch. "?ERA?" string String: either " B.C. " or " A.D. " if the year is before 1000 A.D. otherwise a blank: " ". "era" string String (either "b.c." or "a.d.") giving era associated with an epoch. "?era?" string String: either " b.c. " or " a.d. " if the year is before 1000 A.D. otherwise a blank: " ". "HR" numeric hour component of time "JULIAND" numeric Julian date component of time "MM" numeric numeric representation of month component "MN" numeric minute component of time "MON" string upper case three letter abbreviation for month "Mon" string capitalized three letter abbreviation for month "mon" string lower case three letter abbreviation for month "MONTH" string upper case full name of month "Month" string capitalized full name of month "month" string lower case full name of month "SC" numeric seconds component of time "SP1950" numeric seconds past 1950 component of time "SP2000" numeric seconds past 2000 component of time "YR" numeric last two digits of year component of time "YYYY" numeric year component of time "WEEKDAY" string upper case day of week "Weekday" string capitalized day of week "weekday" string lower case day of week "WKD" string upper case three letter abbreviation for day of week. "Wkd" string capitalized three letter abbreviation for day of week. "wkd" string lower case three letter abbreviation for day of week. String Markers String markers are portions of the format picture that will be replaced with a character string that represents the corresponding component of a time. Numeric Markers Numeric markers are portions of the format picture that will be replaced with a decimal string that represents the corresponding component of a time. Meta Markers Meta markers (listed under the class ``meta'' in the table above) are used to indicate "global" properties of your time string. You may specify time scale and how rounding should be performed on the components of time in your output string. Meta markers may be placed anywhere in your format picture. They do not contribute to placement of characters in output time strings. Also there are no restrictions on how many meta markers you may place in the format picture. However, if you supply conflicting `meta' markers (for example "::TDT" and "::TDB") in your picture the first marker listed (in left to right order) overrules the conflicting marker that appears later in the picture. Default Meta Markers If you do not specify a time system, calendar, or time zone through the use of a Meta Marker, timout_c uses the values returned by the SPICE routine timdef_c. The default time system, calendar returned by timdef_c are UTC and the Gregorian calendar. The default time zone returned by timdef_c is a blank indicating that no time zone offset should be used. See the header for the routine timdef_c for a more complete discussion of setting and retrieving default values. Modifier Markers The numeric markers listed in the table above stand for integers unless they are modified through use of a modifier marker. The strings .# .## .### .#### are used to this end. When a numeric marker is followed immediately by one of these modifiers, the corresponding time component will be written with the number of decimal places indicated by the number of successive occurrences of the character '#'. Any numeric token may be modified. Rounding vs. Truncation The meta markers ::TRNC and ::RND allow you to control how the output time picture is rounded. If you specify ::TRNC all components of time are simply truncated to the precision specified by the marker and any modifier. If you specify ::RND the output time is rounded to the least significant component of the format picture. The default action is truncation. Whether an output time string should be rounded or truncated depends upon what you plan to do with the string. For example suppose you simply want to get the calendar date associated with a time and not the time of day. Then you probably do not want to round your output. Rounding 1992 Dec 31, 13:12:00 to the nearest day produces 1993 Jan 1. Thus in this case rounding is probably not appropriate. However, if you are producing output for plotting using Julian Date, seconds past 1950 or seconds past 2000, you will probably want your output rounded so as to produce a smoother plot. Time Systems timout_c can produce output strings for epochs relative to any of the systems UTC, TT or TDT, or TDB. If you do not explicitly specify a time system, timout_c will produce strings relative to the time system returned by the SPICE routine timdef_c. Unless you call timdef_c and change it, the default time system is UTC. However, by using one of the Meta Markers ::UTC, ::TT, ::TDT, or ::TDB you may specify that timout_c produce time strings relative to the UTC, TT or TDT, or TDB system respectively. Time Zones The meta markers ::UTC+h:m and ::UTC-h:m allow you to offset UTC times so that you may represent times in a time zone other than GMT. For example you can output times in Pacific Standard time by placing the meta-marker ::UTC-8 in your format picture. For instance, if you use the picture YYYY Mon DD, HR:MN:SC ::UTC you will get output strings such as: 1995 Jan 03, 12:00:00 If you use the picture YYYY Mon DD, HR:MN:SC ::UTC-8 you will get output strings such as: 1995 Jan 03, 04:00:00 Finally, if you use the picture YYYY Mon DD, HR:MN:SC ::UTC-8:15 you will get output string 1995 Jan 03, 03:45:00 Note that the minutes are always added or subtracted based on the sign present in the time zone specifier. In the case of ::UTC+h:m, minutes are added. In the case ::UTC-h:m, minutes are subtracted. The unsigned part of the hours component can be no more than 12. The unsigned part of the minutes component can be no more than 59. Calendars The calendar currently used by western countries is the Gregorian calendar. This calendar begins on Oct 15, 1582. Prior to Gregorian calendar the Julian calendar was used. The last Julian calendar date prior to the beginning of the Gregorian calendar is Oct 5, 1582. The primary difference between the Julian and Gregorian calendars is in the determination of leap years. Nevertheless, both can be formally extended backward and forward in time indefinitely. By default timout_c uses the default calendar returned by timdef_c. Under most circumstances this will be the Gregorian calendar (::GCAL). However you may specify that timout_c use a specific calendar through use of one of the calendar Meta Markers. You may specify that timout_c use the Julian calendar (::JCAL), the Gregorian calendar (::GCAL) or a mixture of both (::MCAL). If you specify ::MCAL, epochs that occur after the beginning of the Gregorian calendar will be represented using the Gregorian calendar, and epochs prior to the beginning of the Gregorian calendar will be represented using the Julian calendar. Getting Software to Construct Pictures for You. Although it is not difficult to construct time format pictures, you do need to be aware of the various markers that may appear in a format picture. There is an alternative means for getting a format picture. The routine tpictr_c constructs format pictures from a sample time string. For example, suppose you would like your time strings to look like the basic pattern of the string below. "Fri Jul 26 12:22:09 PDT 1996" You can call tpictr_c with this string, and it will create the appropriate `pictur' for use with timout_c. tpictr_c ( "Fri Jul 26 12:22:09 PDT 1996", LENPIC, LENERR, pictur, &ok, errmsg ); The result will be: "Wkd Mon DD HR:MN:SC (PDT) ::UTC-7" Note: not every date that you can read is interpretable by tpictr_c. For example, you might be able to understand that 19960212121116 is Feb 2 1996, 12:11:16. However, tpictr_c cannot recognize this string. Thus it is important to check the logical output OK to make sure that tpictr_c was able to understand the time picture you provided. Even thought tpictr_c can not recognize every time pattern that has been used by various people, it does recognize nearly all patterns that you use when you want to communicate outside your particular circle of colleagues. ExamplesThe numerical results shown for these examples may differ across platforms. The results depend on the SPICE kernels used as input, the compiler and supporting libraries, and the machine specific arithmetic implementation. 1) Given a sample with the format of the UNIX date string local to California, create a SPICE time picture for use in timout_c. Using that SPICE time picture, convert a series of ephemeris times to that picture format. Use the LSK kernel below to load the leap seconds and time constants required for the conversions. naif0012.tls Example code begins here. /. Program timout_ex1 ./ #include <stdio.h> #include "SpiceUsr.h" int main( ) { /. Local parameters. ./ #define ERRLEN 400 #define TIMLEN 65 /. Local variables ./ SpiceBoolean ok; SpiceChar err [ERRLEN]; SpiceChar pictur [TIMLEN]; SpiceChar * sample; SpiceChar timstr [TIMLEN]; SpiceChar * utcstr; SpiceDouble et; /. Load LSK file. ./ furnsh_c ( "naif0012.tls" ); /. Create the required time picture. ./ sample = "Thu Oct 01 11:11:11 PDT 1111"; tpictr_c ( sample, ERRLEN, TIMLEN, pictur, &ok, err ); if ( ! ok ) { printf( "Invalid time picture.\n" ); printf( "%s\n", err ); } else { /. Convert the input UTC time to ephemeris time. ./ utcstr = "24 Mar 2018 16:23:00 UTC"; str2et_c ( utcstr, &et ); /. Now convert `et' to the desired output format. ./ timout_c ( et, pictur, TIMLEN, timstr ); printf( "Sample format: %s\n", sample ); printf( "Time picture : %s\n", pictur ); printf( "\n" ); printf( "Input UTC : %s\n", utcstr ); printf( "Output : %s\n", timstr ); } return ( 0 ); } When this program was executed on a Mac/Intel/cc/64-bit platform, the output was: Sample format: Thu Oct 01 11:11:11 PDT 1111 Time picture : Wkd Mon DD HR:MN:SC PDT YYYY ::UTC-7 Input UTC : 24 Mar 2018 16:23:00 UTC Output : Sat Mar 24 09:23:00 PDT 2018 2) Convert a UTC time to a string that contains both the calendar representations of the date as well as the Julian date; for example a string of the form: "Thu Aug 01 09:47:16 PDT 1996 (2450297.1994 JDUTC)" Use the LSK kernel below to load the leap seconds and time constants required for the conversions. naif0012.tls Example code begins here. /. Program timout_ex2 ./ #include <stdio.h> #include "SpiceUsr.h" int main( ) { /. Local parameters. ./ #define TIMLEN 80 /. Local variables ./ SpiceChar * pictur; SpiceChar timstr [TIMLEN]; SpiceChar * utcstr; SpiceDouble et; /. Load LSK file. ./ furnsh_c ( "naif0012.tls" ); /. Convert the input UTC time to ephemeris time. ./ utcstr = "24 Mar 2018 16:23:00 UTC"; str2et_c ( utcstr, &et ); /. Create the required time picture. This could be done using tpictr_c. ./ pictur = "Wkd Mon DD HR:MN ::UTC-7 YYYY (JULIAND.#### JDUTC)"; /. Now convert `et' to the desired output format. ./ timout_c ( et, pictur, TIMLEN, timstr ); printf( "Input UTC: %s\n", utcstr ); printf( "Output : %s\n", timstr ); return ( 0 ); } When this program was executed on a Mac/Intel/cc/64-bit platform, the output was: Input UTC: 24 Mar 2018 16:23:00 UTC Output : Sat Mar 24 09:23 2018 (2458202.1826 JDUTC) RestrictionsNone. Literature_ReferencesNone. Author_and_InstitutionN.J. Bachman (JPL) J. Diaz del Rio (ODC Space) E.D. Wright (JPL) Version-CSPICE Version 1.2.0, 10-AUG-2021 (EDW) (JDR) (NJB) Changed the input argument name "lenout" to "outlen" for consistency with other routines. Corrected typo preventing correct calculation of decimal values for HR.###... and MN.###... markers with ::UTC+N:M and ::UTC-N:M meta tags. Added "::TT" as a time system meta marker equivalent-to/ alias-for "::TDT". No change to functionality. Edited the header to comply with NAIF standard. Converted the existing code fragments into complete examples and added references to required LSKs. Updated -Exceptions section, rewording the existing entry and adding three additional cases. Fixed call to tpictr_c in -Particulars. Corrected header example string: changed token HH to HR. Updated "output" argument description in -Detailed_Output. -CSPICE Version 1.1.1, 14-AUG-2006 (EDW) Edited incorrect description of output. Replace mention of ldpool_c with furnsh_c. -CSPICE Version 1.1.0, 09-FEB-1998 (NJB) Re-implemented routine without dynamically allocated, temporary strings. Updated the -Exceptions header section. -CSPICE Version 1.0.0, 25-OCT-1997 (EDW) Index_EntriesConvert and format d.p. seconds past J2000 as a string |
Fri Dec 31 18:41:14 2021