You are viewing the version of this documentation from Perl 5.005. View the latest version
localtime EXPR

Converts a time as returned by the time function to a 9-element array with the time analyzed for the local time zone. Typically used as follows:

    #  0    1    2     3     4    5     6     7     8
    ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) =
						localtime(time);

All array elements are numeric, and come straight out of a struct tm. In particular this means that $mon has the range 0..11 and $wday has the range 0..6 with sunday as day 0. Also, $year is the number of years since 1900, that is, $year is 123 in year 2023, and not simply the last two digits of the year.

If EXPR is omitted, uses the current time (localtime(time)).

In scalar context, returns the ctime(3) value:

$now_string = localtime;  # e.g., "Thu Oct 13 04:54:34 1994"

This scalar value is not locale dependent, see perllocale, but instead a Perl builtin. Also see the Time::Local module, and the strftime(3) and mktime(3) function available via the POSIX module. To get somewhat similar but locale dependent date strings, set up your locale environment variables appropriately (please see perllocale) and try for example:

    use POSIX qw(strftime);
	$now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", localtime;

Note that the %a and %b, the short forms of the day of the week and the month of the year, may not necessarily be three characters wide.