.\" This file is automatically generated. Do not edit! .TH DP 8 "April 22, 1986" MH [mh.6] .UC 6 .SH NAME dp \- parse dates 822\-style .SH SYNOPSIS .in +.5i .ti -.5i /usr/new/lib/mh/dp \%[\-form\ formatfile] \%[\-format\ string] \%[\-width\ columns] dates\ ... \%[\-help] .in -.5i .SH DESCRIPTION \fIDp\fR is a program that parses dates according to the ARPA Internet standard. It also understands many non\-standard formats, such as those produced by TOPS\-20 sites and some UNIX sites using \fIctime\fR\0(3). It is useful for seeing how \fIMH\fR will interpret a date. The \fIdp\fR program treats each argument as a single date, and prints the date out in the official 822\-format. Hence, it is usually best to enclose each argument in double\-quotes for the shell. To override the output format used by \fIdp\fR, the `\-format\ string' or `\-format\ file' switches are used. This permits individual fields of the address to be extracted with ease. The string is simply a format stringand thefile is simply a format file. See \fImh\-format\fR\0(5) for the details. Here is the default format string used by \fIdp\fR: .ti +.5i %<(nodate{text})error: %{text}%|%(putstr(pretty{text}))%> which says that if an error was detected, print the error, a `:', and the date in error. Otherwise, output the 822\-proper format of the date. .Fi ^$HOME/\&.mh\(ruprofile~^The user profile .Pr None .Sa ap(8) .br \fIStandard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages\fR (aka RFC\-822) .De `\-format' default as described above .Ds `\-width' default to the width of the terminal .Co None .Bu The argument to the `\-format' switch must be interpreted as a single token by the shell that invokes \fIdp\fR. Therefore, one must usually place the argument to this switch inside double\-quotes. .En