bionic (1) hodie.1.gz

Provided by: hodie_1.5-2build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       hodie - Print current date and time... in Latin

SYNOPSIS

       hodie [ OPTION ]...

DESCRIPTION

       hodie  prints out the current date using classic Latin, and in addition also prints it out and time using
       Roman numerals.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Print short help message with syntax

       -v, --verbose
              Print months and days (pridie, Kalends, Nones, Ides) full and  not  the  respective  abbreviations
              (standard mode of operation)

              Two  occurrences of -v as well as the use of -vv  or --extremely-verbose will include the numerals
              where applicable fully declined, as in 'ante diem quintum Kalends Septembres'.

       -n, --numerals
              Don't print anything in Latin - only the date and time as Roman numerals.

       -x, --force-numerals
              Print both the verbose latin and the date and time as Roman numerals.

       -c, --classic, --auc
              Print the year in the classic manner ab urbe condita instead of the more modern anno domini .

       -a, --ante-diem
              Print the date expressing the number of days to the next main day with the  ante  diem  expression
              instead of ablative case.

       -d, --date
              Print  out  any  date.  This  has  a  rather  special syntax, with a keyword following the -d flag
              choosing input format. See section on DATE INPUT below.

       -r, --republican OFFSET
              Print out the date dated ab urbe tua condita with the offset counted in years as compared  to  the
              modern european kalendar (originating with the hypothetical birth of christ).  hodie -r -753 would
              be equivalent with hodie -c

       --version
              Print out the version number of this release and exit. No matter whether other options  appear  on
              the command line or not.

DATE INPUT

       Following the -d or the --date option flags, the first item must be one of the following:

       verbose
              In  this case, the year, month and day are given by following the verbose keyword by the flags -y,
              --year, -m, --month, -d, --day for year, month and date respectively

       ymd    After this flag, the date comes in the format YYYY-MM-DD , where the numbers may be  separated  by
              any non-numeric character.

       dmy    With this flag, the date is given as DD-MM-YYYY

       mdy    With  this  flag,  the date is given as MM-DD-YYYY Restrictions on the characters that may replace
              the hyphen apply as above.

HISTORY

       The story began on the 10. of August, 2000 (a.d. VI Id. Iul., MM). Having finished most of my  assignment
       for  my  two-month  summer  job  at  Ericsson  Eurolab Deutschland, Nuremberg, I was idling around on the
       Internet, and stumbled over the dotcomma-challenges  <http://www.dotcomma.org>  ,  where  especially  the
       Roman numeral challenge started my mind.

       Almost  an  hour  hacking, and there it was, another hour, and the language support was there. Before the
       night was over, I had written this man page and had the layout of a decent Makefile drawn out mentally.

       At the end of the next day, I was so far that I actually had the workings of RPM worked out,  constructed
       a  .rpm-package  and  a  .src.rpm-package,  which  was  promptly  released  on my home-page, announced on
       freshmeat and uploaded to metalab (apps/misc :-).

       Response was quick and plentiful. By now, I have compilation reports from Linux, FreeBSD and SCO Unixware
       7; there are a few compability issues to put aside, but it works surprisingly well.

RETURN VALUES

       hodie returns zero. Always. If it doesn't, then something is really bad with the code.

       For some really unreadable code, this means that hodie could be used as a strange replacement for true

BUGS

       It doesn't sanity check the input... telling hodie to display the roman form of the 99th of march gives a
       slightly jumbled output, which most definitely does not make sense.

       Reports are more than welcome (e-mail below).

AUTHOR

       Now, who would come up with such a thing?  Well, I'm Mikael  Johansson,  a  rather  all-round  geek  from
       Stockholm.  I'm  gravely  interested  in  languages,  in computers and in mathematics; a combination more
       dangerous than you might think.

       E-mails to <mikael@johanssons.org>

SEE ALSO

       date(1)