# SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE # Copyright (C) YEAR Free Software Foundation, Inc. # This file is distributed under the same license as the PACKAGE package. # FIRST AUTHOR , YEAR. # #, fuzzy msgid "" msgstr "" "Project-Id-Version: PACKAGE VERSION\n" "POT-Creation-Date: 2025-04-30 04:52-0300\n" "PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n" "Last-Translator: FULL NAME \n" "Language-Team: LANGUAGE \n" "Language: \n" "MIME-Version: 1.0\n" "Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8\n" "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n" #. type: Title = #: src/content/en/about.adoc:1 #, no-wrap msgid "About" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: src/content/en/about.adoc:9 msgid "" "Hi, I'm EuAndreh. I write software and, occasionally, music. You can find " "my contact information in the footer of this page, or mail my " "{mailto}[public inbox] ({archive}[archive])." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: src/content/en/about.adoc:11 msgid "" "This is my personal website where I write articles, publish software and " "more related work." msgstr "" #. type: Title = #: src/content/en/tils/2020/08/12/filename-timestamp.adoc:1 #, no-wrap msgid "Simple filename timestamp" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: src/content/en/tils/2020/08/12/filename-timestamp.adoc:7 msgid "" "When writing Jekyll posts or creating log files with dates on them, I " "usually struggle with finding a direct way of accomplishing that. There's a " "simple solution: `date -I`." msgstr "" #. type: delimited block - #: src/content/en/tils/2020/08/12/filename-timestamp.adoc:12 #, no-wrap msgid "" "./my-program.sh > my-program.$(date -I).log\n" "cp post-template.md _posts/$(date -I)-post-slug.md\n" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: src/content/en/tils/2020/08/12/filename-timestamp.adoc:16 msgid "" "Using this built-in GNU/Linux tool allows you to `touch $(date -I).md` to " "readily create a `2020-08-12.md` file." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: src/content/en/tils/2020/08/12/filename-timestamp.adoc:20 msgid "" "I always had to read `man date` or search the web over and over, and after " "doing this repeatedly it became clear that both `date -I` and `date -Is` " "(`s` here stands for seconds) are the thing that I'm looking for 95% of the " "time:" msgstr "" #. type: delimited block - #: src/content/en/tils/2020/08/12/filename-timestamp.adoc:27 #, no-wrap msgid "" "# inside my-program.sh\n" "echo \"Program started at $(date -Is)\"\n" "# output is:\n" "# Program started at 2020-08-12T09:04:58-03:00\n" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: src/content/en/tils/2020/08/12/filename-timestamp.adoc:31 msgid "" "Both date formats are hierarchical, having the bigger time intervals to the " "left. This means that you can easily sort them (and even tab-complete them) " "with no extra effort or tool required." msgstr ""