view tests/test-parse-date @ 10301:56b50194617f

templates: rename `Last change' column in hgwebdir repository list. This patch changes column headers in the templates that previously said `Last change' to `Last modified'. Neither code nor functionality are changed other than that. For some time now, I have been annoyed by the fact the `Last change' column didn't list the age of the youngest changeset in the repository, or at least tip. It just occurred to me that this is because the wording is slightly misleading; what the column in fact lists is when the repository was last *modified*, that is, when changesets was last added or removed from it. The word `change' can be understood as referring to the changeset itself. Using `changed' would be ever so slightly less amigous. However, the standard nomenclature in this case is `modification date' and `Last modified', which is incidentally entirely unambigous. Hence, `Last modified' is the wording used.
author Dan Villiom Podlaski Christiansen <danchr@gmail.com>
date Sun, 24 Jan 2010 20:51:53 +0100
parents 08a0f04b56bd
children
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#!/bin/sh

# This runs with TZ="GMT"
hg init
echo "test-parse-date" > a
hg add a
hg ci -d "2006-02-01 13:00:30" -m "rev 0"
echo "hi!" >> a
hg ci -d "2006-02-01 13:00:30 -0500" -m "rev 1"
hg tag -d "2006-04-15 13:30" "Hi"
hg backout --merge -d "2006-04-15 13:30 +0200" -m "rev 3" 1
hg ci -d "1150000000 14400" -m "rev 4 (merge)"
echo "fail" >> a
hg ci -d "should fail" -m "fail"
hg ci -d "100000000000000000 1400" -m "fail"
hg ci -d "100000 1400000" -m "fail"

# Check with local timezone other than GMT and with DST
TZ="PST+8PDT"
export TZ
# PST=UTC-8 / PDT=UTC-7
hg debugrebuildstate
echo "a" > a
hg ci -d "2006-07-15 13:30" -m "summer@UTC-7"
hg debugrebuildstate
echo "b" > a
hg ci -d "2006-07-15 13:30 +0500" -m "summer@UTC+5"
hg debugrebuildstate
echo "c" > a
hg ci -d "2006-01-15 13:30" -m "winter@UTC-8"
hg debugrebuildstate
echo "d" > a
hg ci -d "2006-01-15 13:30 +0500" -m "winter@UTC+5"
hg log --template '{date|date}\n'

# Test issue1014 (fractional timezones)
hg debugdate "1000000000 -16200" # 0430
hg debugdate "1000000000 -15300" # 0415
hg debugdate "1000000000 -14400" # 0400
hg debugdate "1000000000 0"      # GMT
hg debugdate "1000000000 14400"  # -0400
hg debugdate "1000000000 15300"  # -0415
hg debugdate "1000000000 16200"  # -0430
hg debugdate "Sat Sep 08 21:16:40 2001 +0430"
hg debugdate "Sat Sep 08 21:16:40 2001 -0430"

# Test 12-hours times
hg debugdate "2006-02-01 1:00:30PM +0000"
hg debugdate "1:00:30PM" > /dev/null || echo 'failed'

#Test date formats with '>' or '<' accompanied by space characters
hg log -d '>' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d '<' hg log -d '>' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d ' >' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d ' <' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d '> ' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d '< ' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d ' > ' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d ' < ' --template '{date|date}\n'


hg log -d '>02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d '<02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d ' >02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d ' <02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d '> 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d '< 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d ' > 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d ' < 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d '>02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d '<02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d ' >02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d ' <02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d '> 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d '< 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'

hg log -d ' > 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
hg log -d ' < 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'