On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 7:56 PM, sc <toothpik@swbell.net> wrote:
I didn't know about that function, though I was interested in general solution as well.
just wondering: would you still want to do that if you knew vim
supports its own strftime function?
:let td = strftime("%Y-%b-%d")
will give you a nice 11 character string in 'td', and you can
adjust to your preferences
I didn't know about that function, though I was interested in general solution as well.
On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 9:05 PM, Gary Johnson <garyjohn@spocom.com> wrote:
As sc wrote, strftime() is a better solution in this case. However,
for commands for which Vim does not have an internal equivalent, use
system(), e.g.,
let stamp = system("date +%s")
That will include the trailing newline in your stamp variable. If
that's undesirable, use this instead:
let stamp = substitute(system("date +%s"), '\n', '', '')
This is it.
Thank you all a lot!
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