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Débuté par Pat Biker, 30 nov. 2004 15:27 - 4 réponses |
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Posté le 30 novembre 2004 - 15:27 |
Hi, Unbelievable but true, 6H00 is indeed the result of adding 15H00 and 15H00. This little piece of code shows that. d1 is Duration = "0150000000" d2 is Duration
d2 = d1 + d1 Info(d2..Hour)
Is it not a Gotcha ? I'am afraid it is! Bye Pat Biker |
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Posté le 30 novembre 2004 - 15:44 |
G'day Pat Here is an alternate view Given that you are dealing with hours and minutes then you could also argue that 15hours + 15 hours = 30hours 30 hours -24 hours = 6 Could be that equations with hours attempts to give the time for the result. After all if you add 1 day to the 30th of November the result is not 32, it is 1, as in the first of December Regards Al |
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Posté le 30 novembre 2004 - 16:32 |
Hi, Unbelievable but true, 6H00 is indeed the result of adding 15H00 and 15H00. This little piece of code shows that. d1 is Duration = "0150000000" d2 is Duration
d2 = d1 + d1 Info(d2..Hour)
Is it not a Gotcha ? I'am afraid it is! Bye Pat Biker I don't agree that it's a Gotcha but I certainly concede that it's a bit fiddly. Here's your code with slight amendments d1 is Duration = StringToDuration("0150000","DHHMMSS") d2 is Duration d2 = d1 + d1 Info(DurationToString(d2,"DHHMM")) The pictures can be set up how you want them. For instance if you want to include hundredths of a second, put "LL" into the picture. You will end up with a result in days, hours and minutes (and seconds and parts thereof if you wish). You can then string slice this to get the day component, multiply this by 24 and add the hours component, to get the total number of hours. It's a bit messy I agree but it works OK. I had thought that there was a simple picture or function which produced a result simply in hours but having looked through the Help file, I can't find this so I think I must be confusing it with one of the spreadsheet packages which does now allow you to format in hours only, not days and hours. Hope this helps. Chris L Melbourne, Oz |
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Posté le 30 novembre 2004 - 18:07 |
Hello Pat, I think that you did overlock something (the 1 in front of the 06). The result of your code is "1060000000" which means: 1 Day and 6 hours. 15 h + 15 h is indeed 30 h and that's 1 day and 6 hours. HTH Raimund
Hi, Unbelievable but true, 6H00 is indeed the result of adding 15H00 and 15H00. This little piece of code shows that. d1 is Duration = "0150000000" d2 is Duration
d2 = d1 + d1 Info(d2..Hour)
Is it not a Gotcha ? I'am afraid it is! Bye Pat Biker
http://www.invitec.com |
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Posté le 01 décembre 2004 - 08:25 |
Hi Chris, CHRIS >I had thought that there was a simple picture or function which CHRIS >produced a result simply in hours but having looked through the CHRIS >Help file, I can't find this I think too that some functions are missing in the WLangage. I suggested some of them on my site, like DurationInHour, which could have returned 30H00 in the present case. Or some new properties, something like ..HourCount. However it would not fit the common need to add hours. A teacher, for example, will want to add the duration of its lessons and get a result in a form like 110H30 or 110,5H. I'm not sure which way is best, but I'm certain some improvements are needed to easy handling duration, date and time calculations. Ciao http://wdgotcha.atspace.com |
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