El 26/06/11 05:54, Kevin Fishburne escribió: > On 06/25/2011 09:41 PM, nando wrote: >> Yes-Silly me! >> How about trying the print statements with ; and not& >> I'm curious how the bug manifests. > > It displays the same results: > > Public Sub Main() > > Dim t As Float > > t = CFloat(Now) ' Current time and date. > > Print "1: CDate(t): "; CDate(t) > Print "2: Format$(CDate(t), \"hh:nn:AM/PM\"): "; Format$(CDate(t), > "hh:nn:AM/PM") > Print "3: CDate(t): "; CDate(t) > Print "4: Format$(CDate(t), \"hh:nn:AM/PM\"): "; Format$(CDate(t), > "hh:nn:AM/PM") > Print "5: CDate(t): "; CDate(t) > > End > > 1: CDate(t): 06/25/2011 23:52:54 > 2: Format$(CDate(t), "hh:nn:AM/PM"): 11:52:PM > 3: CDate(t): 06/25/2011 11:52:54 > 4: Format$(CDate(t), "hh:nn:AM/PM"): 11:52:AM > 5: CDate(t): 06/25/2011 11:52:54
Hi all >> >> Out of curiousity, what's the difference between concatenating strings >> with ";" versus "&"? >> @Kevin Well, AFAIK using ';' (semicolon) inserts a single '\t' (tab character) and ';;' (double semicolon) inserts a single space. Someone could correct me if I'm wrong. Returning to the main question, I've tested your example with a slight modification and things went worse... It doesn't print 'AM/PM' at all: Print "1: CDate(t): "; CDate(t) Print "2: Format$(CDate(t), \"hh:nn AM/PM\"):"; Format$(CDate(t), "hh:nn AM/PM") Print "3: CDate(t): "; CDate(t) Print "4: Format$(CDate(t), \"hh:nn:AM/PM\"):"; Format$(CDate(t), "hh:nn:AM/PM") Print "5: CDate(t): "; CDate(t) Notice the space instead of ':' (colon) in the 2nd line. These are the results: 1: CDate(t): 26/06/2011 12:40:29 2: Format$(CDate(t), "hh:nn AM/PM"): 12:40 3: CDate(t): 26/06/2011 12:40:29 4: Format$(CDate(t), "hh:nn:AM/PM"): 12:40: 5: CDate(t): 26/06/2011 12:40:29 System here is Linux Mint 10 (32bit), Gnome, Gambas3 rev. #3899 with Spanish localization, if it matters somehow. Best regards, -- Jesus Guardon ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All of the data generated in your IT infrastructure is seriously valuable. Why? It contains a definitive record of application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2d-c2 _______________________________________________ Gambas-user mailing list Gambas-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gambas-user