On Friday 11 Nov 2005 15:14, Michaël Larouche wrote: > David Jarvie wrote: > > On Tuesday 08 Nov 2005 22:40, Nicolas Goutte wrote: > >> On Tuesday 08 November 2005 23:00, David Jarvie wrote: > >>> Now that the time zone classes have been updated, there is a need to be > >>> able to handle date/times which have an associated time zone. I attach > >>> a proposed new kdecore class, KDateTime, which represents a date/time > >>> with an associated time zone. The aim is to make time zone handling as > >>> automatic as possible when manipulating dates and times. Its interface > >>> is very similar to QDateTime, but it is not inherited from QDateTime > >>> mainly because QDateTime's methods are not virtual. > >>> > >>> The code compiles, but I until I finish the test program is untested. > >>> Note that if the new class is committed, the time zone classes will > >>> need to be amended to handle the new class. > >>> > >>> Comments please. (Note that I am going away and won't be able to > >>> respond for a few days.) > >> > >> Do you plan something like QDateTime::toString and QDateTime::fromString > >> for ISO dates, including time zone handling? > >> > >> (Also, I am not sure how flexible such functions need to be, I would > >> need such them for KBabel saving and loading Gettext PO files.) > > > > Yes, it would be a good idea. There would need to be an extension to the > > format codes to be able to specify where and in what format the time zone > > should appear. I suggest that the default format would append the > > abbreviated code for the time zone to the end of the string. > > A support of GLIBC time formatting > (http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Formatting-Calendar-Time >.html#Formatting-Calendar-Time) like the one used in strftime() would be a > nice addition to this class. There seems to be a choice between supporting GLIBC time formatting (with % codes) and supporting an extension of the QDateTime::toString() formatting (with codes which don't use %). Probably GLIBC formats are clearer, and they already provide codes for time zones. But QDateTime formats provide better compatibility with the QDateTime class. Both format styles could be supported, but I doubt whether that would really be desirable. What are people's preferences? -- David Jarvie. KAlarm author and maintainer. http://www.astrojar.org.uk/linux/kalarm.html