gmtime expr
Converts a time string as returned by the time function to a
nine-element list with
the time correct for Greenwich Mean Time zone (a.k.a. GMT, UTC, etc.).
Typically used as follows:
($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) =
gmtime(time);
All list elements are numeric and come straight out of a
C language struct tm. In
particular this means that $mon has the range 0..11,
$wday has the range 0..6,
and the year has had 1,900 subtracted from
it. (You can remember which ones are
0-based because those are the ones you're always using as subscripts
into 0-based arrays containing month and day names.)
If expr is
omitted, it does gmtime(time). For example, to print the
current month in London:
$london_month = (qw(Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec))[(gmtime)[4]];
The Perl library module Time::Local contains a subroutine, timegm(),
that can convert in the opposite direction.In scalar context, gmtime returns a ctime(3)-like string
based on the GMT time value.