glib/tests/testgdateparser.c
Havoc Pennington 98e5d88bbe Two new files. This is kind of ugly code, but I want to go ahead and make
1998-12-02  Havoc Pennington  <hp@pobox.com>

* testgdate.c, testgdateparser.c: Two new files. This is kind of
ugly code, but I want to go ahead and make the tests available.
It isn't contaminating any other code. :-) Since one of these
is interactive and the other takes a while to run, I've kept
them separate from testglib for now.
* Makefile.am: Build gdate test programs.
1998-12-02 20:20:35 +00:00

110 lines
2.1 KiB
C

#include "glib.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <locale.h>
void g_date_debug_print(GDate* d)
{
if (!d) g_print("NULL!\n");
else
g_print("julian: %u (%s) DMY: %u %u %u (%s)\n",
d->julian_days,
d->julian ? "valid" : "invalid",
d->day,
d->month,
d->year,
d->dmy ? "valid" : "invalid");
fflush(stdout);
}
/* These only work in the POSIX locale, maybe C too -
* type POSIX into the program to check them
*/
char* posix_tests [] = {
"19981024",
"981024",
"October 1998",
"October 98",
"oCT 98",
"10/24/98",
"10 -- 24 -- 98",
"10/24/1998",
"October 24, 1998",
NULL
};
int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
GDate* d;
gchar* loc;
gchar input[1024];
loc = setlocale(LC_ALL,"");
if (loc)
g_print("\nLocale set to %s\n", loc);
else
g_print("\nLocale unchanged\n");
d = g_date_new();
while (fgets(input, 1023, stdin))
{
if (input[0] == '\n')
{
g_print("Enter a date to parse and press enter, or type `POSIX':\n");
continue;
}
if (strcmp(input,"POSIX\n") == 0)
{
char** s = posix_tests;
while (*s) {
g_date_set_parse(d, *s);
g_print("POSIXy parse test `%s' ...", *s);
if (!g_date_valid(d))
{
g_print(" failed.\n");
}
else
{
gchar buf[256];
g_date_strftime(buf,100," parsed `%x' (%B %d %Y)\n",
d);
g_print("%s", buf);
}
++s;
}
}
else
{
g_date_set_parse(d, input);
if (!g_date_valid(d))
{
g_print("Parse failed.\n");
}
else
{
gchar buf[256];
g_date_strftime(buf,100,"Parsed: `%x' (%B %d %Y)\n",
d);
g_print("%s", buf);
}
}
}
g_date_free(d);
return 0;
}