![]() The wayback archive might actually disappear some day, though i dont know if that is realistic, but there are other less known similar services.īitblazer wrote:If any module would be THAT unstable (no longterm support in some way), i would stay far away from using it. If any module would be THAT unstable (no longterm support in some way), i would stay far away from using it. It could happen that a module is posted and erased between snapshots while some later module references the deleted module, but that sounds a bit unlikely and never happened to me yet. Or you use a keyword search limited to the specific purebasic site on the wayback archive to find those other dependancies. You can select any snapshot time from a graph and in that case, you select another point. ![]() Therefore, the wayback engine is not useful for searching specific source code versions. When searching for an older source code, in most cases a specific version number is searched for instead of a date when it was archived. Maybe a forum moderator can move it to a separate forum thread if it gets too much.īitblazer wrote:Here have a look at the PureBasic forum from 20 years ago thanks to the Wayback machine.Apart from the fact that the Wayback Machine, while more reliable, is also an external service that could be shut down at some point. Local = (local - utc) / #SecondsInOneHourĭebug "DIFF: " + diff$(code is free, no copyright exists ) Tm_isdst.l Is summer time? tm_isdst > 0 = Yes ![]() ![]() Tm_yday.l Days since the beginning of the year: 0 to 365 (365 is therefore 366 because after 1. Tm_year.l Number of years since the year 1900 Tm_sec.l 0 to 59 or up to 60 at leap second Code: Select all Structure tm Align #PB_Structure_AlignC ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |