Date: Thu, 14 Aug 2003 12:23:34 -0500 From: Stephen Hilton <nospam@hiltonbsd.com> To: "Charles Howse" <chowse@charter.net> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Using bc in bash script Message-ID: <20030814122334.0a05ab4b.nospam@hiltonbsd.com> In-Reply-To: <003001c36287$2a2a7b40$04fea8c0@moe> References: <20030814115313.2707cb21.nospam@hiltonbsd.com> <003001c36287$2a2a7b40$04fea8c0@moe>
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On Thu, 14 Aug 2003 12:11:55 -0500 "Charles Howse" <chowse@charter.net> wrote: > > Charles, > > > > This will set bc precision to 5 decimal places: > > > > et=`echo "scale=5 ; $end_time - $start_time" | bc` > > Ohhh, I was really hoping on that one...but no, it still reports 0 > seconds. Sorry I jumped the gun there, the scale is needed for this to work but the "date +%s" willonly resolve into whole seconds after reading the date man page. I sure am curious as to how to solve this also, the /usr/bin/time command man page says this: -----------------snip------------------ DESCRIPTION The time utility executes and times the specified utility. After the utility finishes, time writes to the standard error stream, (in seconds): the total time elapsed, the time used to execute the utility process and the time consumed by system overhead. -----------------snip------------------ So that looks like seconds only also. A quick browse through "man sh" and "man bash" look like their builtin time commands also resolve to seconds. Curiousy, Stephen Hilton nospam@hiltonbsd.com
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