1 points | by dubesar 10 hours ago ago
3 comments
Almost trivially easy in a shell one-liner or awk script. I can't think of a reason I would want to display date/time for 418 unique named timezones, but to get the date/time in a specific timezone:
TZ=Asia/Bangkok date TZ=America/Los_Angeles date
https://github.com/dubesar/worldtimebuddy/issues/5.
Yes, I made it for personal use. Also there is a --major flag for just important timezones.
My usage is: `wtbm`
Almost trivially easy in a shell one-liner or awk script. I can't think of a reason I would want to display date/time for 418 unique named timezones, but to get the date/time in a specific timezone:
https://github.com/dubesar/worldtimebuddy/issues/5.
Yes, I made it for personal use. Also there is a --major flag for just important timezones.
My usage is: `wtbm`