datenum to UTC?

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MrKoberec
MrKoberec on 25 Oct 2018
Commented: Peter Perkins on 31 Oct 2018
Hi, I have
10-Oct-2013 15:59:00
and I need UTC time
1381435140
Is there any easy way? (time zone GTM-4)
Thanks!
  1 Comment
Guillaume
Guillaume on 25 Oct 2018
That's not UTC time, that's a Unix Time Stamp
It also appears that your input is a datetime not a datenum.

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Accepted Answer

James Tursa
James Tursa on 25 Oct 2018
Edited: James Tursa on 25 Oct 2018
Are you just looking for how to convert from the former to the latter? E.g.,
s = '10-Oct-2013 15:59:00';
unix_m4 = (datenum(s) - datenum('01-Jan-1970'))*86400 + 4*3600;
or
unix_m4 = seconds((datetime(s) - datetime('01-Jan-1970')) + seconds(4*3600));
or
unix_m4 = seconds(datetime(s,'timezone','-4') - datetime('01-Jan-1970','timezone','UTC'));
This result isn't called UTC btw, it is called Unix time:
  1 Comment
MrKoberec
MrKoberec on 26 Oct 2018
Thank you, James. Your first suggestion did the job (thank you for including the timezone). I'm using an old version of Matlab (long story) and it does not know the datetime. Sorry I forgot to mention this. Thank you also for the link. I understand it better now.

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More Answers (1)

jonas
jonas on 25 Oct 2018
Edited: jonas on 25 Oct 2018
Yes, use datetime instead of datenum.
t = datetime('10-Oct-2013 15:59:00','timezone','-04:00')
t_unix = posixtime(t)
  1 Comment
Peter Perkins
Peter Perkins on 31 Oct 2018
'-04:00' is a valid time zone, but perhaps a little dangerous. It's a time zone that does not observe4 DST. If the OP is in, say, Boston, then that would give the wrong answer for 10-Nov. Something like 'America/New_York' is probably the right choice.

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