// Go supports time formatting and parsing via // pattern-based layouts. package main import "fmt" import "time" func main() { p := fmt.Println // Here's a basic example of formatting a time // according to RFC3339, using the corresponding format // constant. t := time.Now() p(t.Format(time.RFC3339)) // Time parsing uses the same format values as `Format` // does. t1, e := time.Parse( time.RFC3339, "2012-11-01T22:08:41+00:00") p(t1) // `Format` and `Parse` uses example-based formats. They // take a formatted version of the reference time // `Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 MST 2006` to determine the // general pattern with which to format/parse the given // time/string. The example time must be exactly as shown: // the year 2006, 15 for the hour, Monday for the day of // the week, etc. Usually you'll use a constant from // `time` for these formats, but you can also supply // custom formats. p(t.Format("3:04PM")) p(t.Format("Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 2006")) p(t.Format("2006-01-02T15:04:05.999999-07:00")) form := "3 04 PM" t2, e := time.Parse(form, "8 41 PM") p(t2) // For purely numeric representations you can also // use standard string formatting with the extracted // components of the time value. fmt.Printf("%d-%02d-%02dT%02d:%02d:%02d-00:00\n", t.Year(), t.Month(), t.Day(), t.Hour(), t.Minute(), t.Second()) // `Parse` will return an error on malformed input // explaining the parsing problem. ansic := "Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 2006" _, e = time.Parse(ansic, "8:41PM") p(e) }