This crate does only one thing: format a Unix timestamp.
The components_utc()
function returns the components of a timestamp:
```rust let ts = std::time::SystemTime::now() .durationsince(std::time::UNIXEPOCH).unwrap().as_secs();
let components = time_format::components_utc(ts).unwrap();
```
Components are sec
, min
, hour
, month_day
, month
, year
, week_day
and year_day
.
The strftime_utc()
function formats a timestamp, using the same format as the strftime()
function of the standard C library.
```rust let ts = std::time::SystemTime::now() .durationsince(std::time::UNIXEPOCH).unwrap().as_secs();
let s = time_format::strftime_utc("%Y-%m-%d", ts).unwrap();
```
If you need a minimal crate to get timestamps and perform basic operations on them, check out coarsetime.
coarsetime
fully supports WebAssembly, in browsers and WASI environments.