How to convert UTC time to time in YEAR MONTH DAY HH MM SS?
UTC is 1263403529
I need
13-Jan-2012 17:25:29

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C.J. Harris
C.J. Harris am 26 Mär. 2012

0 Stimmen

Grab the following file from the File Exchange:
Then call:
x = 1263403529;
y = datestr(utc2datenum(x));

6 Kommentare

Jisha
Jisha am 26 Mär. 2012
I get an error:
Attempt to execute SCRIPT utc2datenum as a function:
C.J. Harris
C.J. Harris am 26 Mär. 2012
Ensure you have the 'utc2datenum.mexw32' file in the same location as 'utc2datenum.m'.
Jisha
Jisha am 26 Mär. 2012
I do and the entire folder is on the MATLAB path.. it still gives me this error.. I have MATLAB 64 bit R2012a
C.J. Harris
C.J. Harris am 26 Mär. 2012
Then that's your problem. MATLAB isn't recognising the '.mexw32' file since you are using a 64-bit version of MATLAB. You will have to recompile the source code in order to run it on your system.
Jisha
Jisha am 26 Mär. 2012
Thanks..
Christoph Kessler
Christoph Kessler am 29 Feb. 2024
What is the use if Answer requires a specific environment like 64 or 32-bit. Can you simply change without source code?

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Weitere Antworten (3)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord am 27 Jul. 2018

2 Stimmen

You can do this using datetime.
>> dt = datetime(1263403529, 'ConvertFrom', 'posixtime')
dt =
datetime
13-Jan-2010 17:25:29
James Tursa
James Tursa am 26 Mär. 2012

1 Stimme

If this is "seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 TAI" it is more properly called "unix time" or "posix time" or sometimes "epoch time", not UTC. E.g., see this article:
If that is the case you can simply calculate your result as:
x = 1263403529;
e = datenum('01-jan-1970 00:00:00');
y = datestr(e+x/86400,'dd-mm-yyyy hh:mm:ss');

4 Kommentare

C.J. Harris
C.J. Harris am 26 Mär. 2012
For the format '13-Jan-2012 17:25:29' the last line would have to be:
y = datestr(e+x/86400,'dd-mmm-yyyy HH:MM:SS');
James Tursa
James Tursa am 26 Mär. 2012
Oops. Thanks.
Geoff
Geoff am 26 Mär. 2012
It's best to avoid string processing where it's not necessary:
e = datenum(1970,1,1,0,0,0);
James Tursa
James Tursa am 27 Mär. 2012
Well, I would assume e would be a one-time only calculation in which case the string is more readable IMO. But if the goal is to make this calculation faster then I would simply eliminate it altogether. E.g.,
y = datestr(719529+x/86400,'dd-mmm-yyyy HH:MM:SS');
along with a comment stating where the magic number 719529 comes from.

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Uilke Stelwagen
Uilke Stelwagen am 31 Mai 2012

1 Stimme

Wrote my own utc2datenum and discovered that 'UTC' 1263403529 is NOT "13-Jan-2012 17:25:29" but 1326475529 is. I.e. datestr(utc2datenum(1263403529)) = 13-Jan-2010 17:25:29, hence differing 2 years, while datestr(utc2datenum(1326475529)) = 13-Jan-2012 17:25:29. Best thing is to check a routine or algorithm with the 'UTC' time example given on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_time instead of starting with a wrong example.

2 Kommentare

Dan
Dan am 12 Aug. 2012
Current Wikipedia time is
1344541161 (2012-08-09 19:39:21Z)
>> utc = 1344541161
utc =
1.3445e+09
>> datestr(datenum([1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, utc]))
ans =
09-Aug-2012 19:39:21
I just blew everyone's mind...
marleen_ade
marleen_ade am 27 Jul. 2018
perfect! Leave out the square brackets, and it works here too (R2015a 32 bit)

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