From e454ef2d2a37b5b1f38b0d7dd742b0455637a609 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jim Meyering Date: Wed, 11 Feb 2004 08:42:31 +0000 Subject: (Time directives): The %s value *is* changed by the --date=DATE option; don't say otherwise. Patch from Padraig Brady. --- doc/coreutils.texi | 34 ++++++++++++++++++++-------------- 1 file changed, 20 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc') diff --git a/doc/coreutils.texi b/doc/coreutils.texi index 9187dca14..fa0f54d23 100644 --- a/doc/coreutils.texi +++ b/doc/coreutils.texi @@ -5922,29 +5922,39 @@ in C. @item --quoting-style=@var{word} @opindex --quoting-style @cindex quoting style -Use style @var{word} to quote output names. The @var{word} should +Use style @var{word} to quote names. The quoting-style algorithm +takes a file name as input, and outputs a quoted version of the input +name. The @var{word} should be one of the following: @table @samp @item literal -Output names as-is; this is the same as the @option{-N} or +Output as-is; this is the same as the @option{-N} or @option{--literal} option. @item shell -Quote names for the shell if they contain shell metacharacters or would +Quote for the shell if the input contains shell metacharacters or would cause ambiguous output. +The quoting is suitable for @acronym{POSIX}-compatible shells like +@command{bash}, but it does not always work for incompatible shells +like @command{csh}. @item shell-always -Quote names for the shell, even if they would normally not require quoting. +Quote for the shell, even if the input would normally not require +quoting. @item c -Quote names as for a C language string; this is the same as the +Output a C character string literal, including the surrounding +double-quote characters; this is the same as the @option{-Q} or @option{--quote-name} option. @item escape -Quote as with @samp{c} except omit the surrounding double-quote +Output a C character string literal, except omit the +surrounding double-quote characters; this is the same as the @option{-b} or @option{--escape} option. @item clocale -Quote as with @samp{c} except use quotation marks appropriate for the -locale. +Output a C character string literal, except use surrounding quotation +marks appropriate for the locale. @item locale @c Use @t instead of @samp to avoid duplicate quoting in some output styles. -Like @samp{clocale}, but quote @t{`like this'} instead of @t{"like +Output a C character string literal, except use surrounding +quotation marks appropriate for the locale, and quote @t{`like this'} +instead of @t{"like this"} in the default C locale. This looks nicer on many displays. @end table @@ -10847,11 +10857,7 @@ time, 24-hour (hh:mm). Same as @code{%H:%M}. @cindex epoch, seconds since @cindex seconds since the epoch @cindex beginning of time -seconds since the epoch, i.e., 1 January 1970 00:00:00 UTC (a -GNU extension). -Note that this value is the number of seconds between the epoch -and the current date as defined by the localtime system call. -It isn't changed by the @option{--date} option. +seconds since the epoch, i.e., 1 January 1970 00:00:00 UTC (a GNU extension). For examples, @xref{%s-examples}. @item %S second (00@dots{}60). The range is [00@dots{}60], and not [00@dots{}59], -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2