Difference between revisions of "Command/currentdate"

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m (Sorry for the constant optimizations. Please bear with me.)
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and in three days will be \currentdate\ or so.
 
and in three days will be \currentdate\ or so.
 
\stop
 
\stop
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Yet today is \currentdate.
 
Yet today is \currentdate.
 
</context>
 
</context>
  
(Side-note the usage of line breaking and blank lines in the source code and how they alter the PDF product.)</cd:example><cd:example title="Example 5: More Complex Usage"><context source="yes" text="gives">
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(Side-note the usage of line breaks and blank lines in the source code and how they alter the PDF product.)</cd:example><cd:example title="Example 5: More Complex Usage"><context source="yes" text="gives" width="5cm">
 
\definedate[short][month,{,~},day]
 
\definedate[short][month,{,~},day]
\definedate[longfancy][day:++,{ of },month,{ in the year of },year]
+
\definedate[long][{the },day:++,{ of },month,{ in the year of },year]
  
\def\Today{\currentdate[short]}
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\def\Today{\currentdate[long]}
  
% \def = \defineexpandable
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% \def = \defineexpandable
 
% {...} = \start ...\stop
 
% {...} = \start ...\stop
  
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So tomorrow will be \Later{1}{short}.
 
So tomorrow will be \Later{1}{short}.
  
And in three days should be \Later{3}{longfancy} or so.
+
And in three days should be \Later{3}{long} or so.
 
</context>
 
</context>
  
Note the usage of commenting (using the percent sign [<code>%</code>]) to avoid unwanted spacing that occurs when using line breaks especially within brackets (e.g. <code>\start</code> ... <code>\stop</code>).</cd:example></cd:examples>
+
Note the usage of commenting (using the percent sign [<code>%</code>]) to avoid unwanted spacing that occurs when using line breaks, especially within brackets (e.g. <code>\start</code> ... <code>\stop</code>).</cd:example></cd:examples>
 
<cd:notes></cd:notes>
 
<cd:notes></cd:notes>
 
<cd:seealso>
 
<cd:seealso>

Latest revision as of 18:06, 25 August 2023


\currentdate

Summary

The command \currentdate typesets the current date.

Settings

\currentdate[...,...]
[...,...]year year:name y y:name yy Y Y:name YY month month:mnem month:hebrew month:jalali m m:mnem m:hebrew m:jalali MONTH MONTH:mnem MONTH:hebrew MONTH:jalali mm M day day:name day:+ day:ord day:++ day:highord d d:name d:+ d:ord d:++ d:highord dd dd:+ dd:ord dd:++ dd:highord D D:+ D:ord D:++ D:highord weekday weekday:mnem weekday:hebrew weekday:jalali w w:mnem w:hebrew w:jalali WEEKDAY WEEKDAY:mnem WEEKDAY:hebrew WEEKDAY:jalali W referral space \\\\\\\\␣ text hebrew:to jalali:to jalali:from

OptionExplanation
This format is a comma-separated list of field formats and optional separators.

Settings name

\currentdate[...]
[...]name

OptionExplanation
This is a date format defined with \definedate

Description

The command \currentdate typesets the current date using a supplied format.



Examples

Example 1: The Current Date

\currentdate

\currentdate[weekday,month,day,{, },year]

\currentdate[day,{.~},month,{~},year]

gives

Example 2: Incrementing and Decrementing the Current Date

Today is \currentdate.

\increment\normalday

Tomorrow will be \currentdate.

\decrement\normalday

%\increment\normalmonth% -- gives an error as of 08-2023
\increment\normalyear

And today in a year will be \currentdate.

gives

Example 3: Incrementing and Decrementing the Current Date Locally

Today is \currentdate.

\start\increment\normalday
Tomorrow will be \currentdate.
\stop

Yet today is \currentdate.

gives

Example 4: Incrementing and Decrementing the Current Date by N

Hello\dorecurse{1}{, Hello}.

Today is \currentdate.
\start\increment\normalday
So tomorrow will be \currentdate
\stop
\start\dorecurse{3}{\increment\normalday}
and in three days will be \currentdate\ or so.
\stop

Yet today is \currentdate.

gives

(Side-note the usage of line breaks and blank lines in the source code and how they alter the PDF product.)

Example 5: More Complex Usage

\definedate[short][month,{,~},day]
\definedate[long][{the },day:++,{ of },month,{ in the year of },year]

\def\Today{\currentdate[long]}

% \def  = \defineexpandable
% {...} = \start ...\stop

\defineexpandable[2]\Later{%
\start\dorecurse{#1}{\increment\normalday}%
\currentdate[#2]%
\stop
}

Today is \Today\ one should believe.

So tomorrow will be \Later{1}{short}.

And in three days should be \Later{3}{long} or so.

gives

Note the usage of commenting (using the percent sign [%]) to avoid unwanted spacing that occurs when using line breaks, especially within brackets (e.g. \start ... \stop).

Notes

See also

Help from ConTeXt-Mailinglist/Forum

All issues with: