Examples using... time.Date()
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Unix returns t as a Unix time, the number of seconds elapsed
since January 1, 1970 UTC. The result does not depend on the
location associated with t.
Truncate returns the result of rounding t down to a multiple of d (since the zero time).
If d <= 0, Truncate returns t stripped of any monotonic clock reading but otherwise unchanged.
Sub returns the duration t-u. If the result exceeds the maximum (or minimum)
value that can be stored in a Duration, the maximum (or minimum) duration
will be returned.
To compute t-d for a duration d, use t.Add(-d).
String returns the time formatted using the format string
Round returns the result of rounding t to the nearest multiple of d (since the zero time).
The rounding behavior for halfway values is to round up.
If d <= 0, Round returns t stripped of any monotonic clock reading but otherwise unchanged.
Equal reports whether t and u represent the same time instant.
Two times can be equal even if they are in different locations.
For example, 6:00 +0200 CEST and 4:00 UTC are Equal.
See the documentation on the Time type for the pitfalls of using == with
Time values; most code should use Equal instead...
Day returns the day of the month specified by t.
Date returns the year, month, and day in which t occurs.
Before reports whether the time instant t is before u.
AppendFormat is like Format but appends the textual
representation to b and returns the extended buffer.
After reports whether the time instant t is after u.
AddDate returns the time corresponding to adding the
given number of years, months, and days to t.
For example, AddDate(-1, 2, 3) applied to January 1, 2011
returns March 4, 2010.
Add returns the time t+d.
A Location maps time instants to the zone in use at that time.
Typically, the Location represents the collection of time offsets
in use in a geographical area, such as CEST and CET for central Europe.
LoadLocation returns the Location with the given name.
FixedZone returns a Location that always uses
the given zone name and offset (seconds east of UTC).
String returns a string representing the duration in the form "72h3m0.5s".
Leading zero units are omitted. As a special case, durations less than one
second format use a smaller unit (milli-, micro-, or nanoseconds) to ensure
that the leading digit is non-zero. The zero duration formats as 0s.
Date returns the Time corresponding to
Chtimes changes the access and modification times of the named
file, similar to the Unix utime() or utimes() functions.
Package errors implements functions to manipulate errors.
Package gzip implements reading and writing of gzip format compressed files,
as specified in RFC 1952.
Multistream controls whether the reader supports multistream files.