On 06/12/2014 10:56 AM, Steve Zornes wrote: > the date command uses %j to specify number of days since beginning of year. It looks as though %j is meant to mean Julian day which is ACTUALLY the number of days since the julian calendar started. Currently 2,000,000 or so. > number of days since the beginning of the year is called ordinal date and should be specified with a %o > just a thought. > Please read the discussion at https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/coreutils/2013-10/msg00019.html There are two different definitions for Julian date. POSIX has standardized %j to mean the count of days within a Gregorian year, and NOT the astronomical Julian date. http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/toc.htm We are reluctant to burn %o without it being required by POSIX, because strftime letters are already sparse; this is particularly true of burning a letter to be a synonym to an already standardized letter. The proposal in the thread mentioned above would be to add a %J as the Astronomical Julian date, if there proves to be enough demand, but so far, no one has expressed enough interest to actually write the patch. Therefore, I'm closing this as not a bug, although you can feel free to add further replies to the thread. -- Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org