Thanks for the amplification - that was precisely my point. When proposing that strptime() parse "Julian" dates, some more precise definition of Julian is required. --- John Machin <sjmachin@lexicon.net> wrote: > 21/06/2002 10:27:22 PM, Steven Lott <s_lott@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > > >Generally, "Julian" dates are really just the day number > within > >a given year; this is a simple special case of the more > general > >(and more useful) approach that R-D use. > > > >See > >http://emr.cs.iit.edu/home/reingold/calendar-book/index.shtml > > > >for more information. > > > > AFAICT from perusing their book, R-D use the term > "julian-date" to mean a tuple (year, month, day) in the Julian > calendar. > The International Astro. Union uses "Julian date" to mean an > instant in time measured in days (and fraction therof) since > noon on 1 January -4712 (Julian ("proleptic") calendar). See > for example > http://maia.usno.navy.mil/iauc19/iaures.html#B1 > > A "Julian day number" (or "JDN") is generally used to mean an > ordinal day number counting day 0 as Julian_calendar(-4712, 1, > 1) as above. Some folks use JDN to include the IAU's > instant-in-time. > > Some folks use "julian day" to mean a day within a year (range > 0-365 *or* 1-366 (all inclusive)). This terminology IMO should > be severely deprecated. The concept is best described as > something like "day of year", with a > specification of the origin (0 or 1) when appropriate. > > It is not clear from the first of your sentences quoted above > exactly what you are calling a "Julian date": (a) the tuple > (given_year, day_of_year) with calendar not specified or (b) > just day_of_year. However either answer seems > IMO to be an inappropriate addition to the terminology > confusion. > > Cheers, > John > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Python-Dev mailing list > Python-Dev@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev ===== -- S. Lott, CCP :-{) S_LOTT@YAHOO.COM http://www.mindspring.com/~slott1 Buccaneer #468: KaDiMa Macintosh user: drinking upstream from the herd. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! - Official partner of 2002 FIFA World Cup http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com
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