Convert day of year to UTC format?

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Brandon
Brandon on 14 Jul 2023
Commented: Brandon on 17 Jul 2023
How would I go about converting this format to matlab UTC format?
ie:
2012-259T01:53:15.50194
2012-259T01:53:16.50194

Accepted Answer

Cris LaPierre
Cris LaPierre on 14 Jul 2023
T = ["2012-259T01:53:15.50194";
"2012-259T01:53:16.50194"];
T = datetime(T,'InputFormat','uuuu-DDD''T''HH:mm:ss.SSSSS')
T = 2×1 datetime array
15-Sep-2012 01:53:15 15-Sep-2012 01:53:16
  12 Comments
Cris LaPierre
Cris LaPierre on 17 Jul 2023
It is a best practice to always pair a hold on with a hold off. You can usually get things to look the way you want without it. The impact is usually later when you rerun your script, or if you create new plots by plotting in the same figure window. It's best to get in the habit while you are learning.
Brandon
Brandon on 17 Jul 2023
Fair enough, thanks again

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More Answers (1)

Rahul
Rahul on 14 Jul 2023
Edited: Rahul on 14 Jul 2023
Hey Brandon,
The date time format provided by you, seemed to in the ISO 8601 format. Breaking down the format:
  • '2012-259': date as year and day of the year. In this case, it indicates the 259th day of the year 2012.
  • 'T': This is a separator indicating the start of the time component.
  • '01:53:15': time in hours, minutes, and seconds. In this case, it indicates 1 hour, 53 minutes, and 15 seconds.
  • '.50194': fractional part of the seconds. In this case, it indicates 50194 milliseconds.
You can use the following snippet to convert it to a standard UTC Timezone format:
inputTime = ['2012-259T01:53:15.50194'; '2012-259T01:53:16.50194'];
dt = datetime(inputTime, 'InputFormat', 'uuuu-DDD''T''HH:mm:ss.SSSSS', 'TimeZone', 'UTC')
dt = 2×1 datetime array
15-Sep-2012 01:53:15 15-Sep-2012 01:53:16
You can refer to the datetime function documentation to further customize the code as per your needs.
Hope that Helped!

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