Looking at the documentation below I believe all time is military time it is however very possible to convert time simply...
Not so sure about unixtime though to be honest might want to google that portion and see what is possible with unixtime or the differences.
Something like this in plain english you will need to translate to code.
Now you may need to use string functions or time setup to pick out just the time but it shouldn't be impossible not the greatest at code here but with a little work you should be able to get it working!
get the time store data in timeereg
if timeereg is greater than or equal to 13 subtract 12 then print the value
else just print the time as normal
Code: Select alltime():
Will return the date and time as a string. You can optionally specify the format you want it back in.
Options: month, day, hour, min, sec, year, dow (Day of the week, ex. fri)
time({Optional specification of format})
with an option.
time("year")
time(“year-month-day”) will return “2016-Apr-10”
unixtime():
Permit to convert from a date/time in unix format (a number) to text.
Will return the date and time as a string. You can optionally specify the format you want it back in.
Options: month, date, hour, min, sec, year, dow (Day of the week, ex. fri)
unixtime({datenumber} , {Optional specification of format})
with an option.
unixtime(1459681200, "year"
timesetup():
Will set up the time time zone and daylight savings attribute.
timesetup({number or var for time zone},{number or var for dst})
I believe this is a javascript example on how to do the conversion:
Code: Select allfunction formatDate(date) {
var d = new Date(date);
var hh = d.getHours();
var m = d.getMinutes();
var s = d.getSeconds();
var dd = "AM";
var h = hh;
if (h >= 12) {
h = hh-12;
dd = "PM";
}
if (h == 0) {
h = 12;
}
m = m<10?"0"+m:m;
s = s<10?"0"+s:s;
/* if you want 2 digit hours:
h = h<10?"0"+h:h; */
var pattern = new RegExp("0?"+hh+":"+m+":"+s);
var replacement = h+":"+m;
/* if you want to add seconds
replacement += ":"+s; */
replacement += " "+dd;
return date.replace(pattern,replacement);
}
alert(formatDate("February 04, 2011 12:00:00"));