Apache OpenOffice (AOO) Bugzilla – Full Text Issue Listing |
Summary: | Dates read from .dbf file off by 3 days | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | Base | Reporter: | pdelisle <philip> |
Component: | code | Assignee: | Oliver Specht <os_ooo> |
Status: | CLOSED FIXED | QA Contact: | issues@dba <issues> |
Severity: | Trivial | ||
Priority: | P3 | CC: | issues |
Version: | OOo 1.0.1 | Keywords: | oooqa |
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Hardware: | PC | ||
OS: | Linux, all | ||
Issue Type: | DEFECT | Latest Confirmation in: | --- |
Developer Difficulty: | --- |
Description
pdelisle
2002-10-29 11:18:46 UTC
Philip, thanks for supporting OOo and for filing this. Do I understand you correctly that you use form letter fields which are bound to a date field in the database? Additionally, if you did not mistype the dates, the difference is 2 days, not three days, isn't it? Thanks, Frank Hi Frank, Sorry, I should have been more complete in my report. Yes, I created the invoice template using Writer and embedded form fields from the database in this document. Re 2 vs 3 day offset - depends if you count the date in the database as day 1 or day 0. Programmatically I agree with you that it should probably be day 0 (i.e. 2 days off). Also the .dbf is in DOS/ISO850 format. HTH Philip Philip, thanks for the feedback. for the 2 days: between "29 June 2002" and "1 July 2002" are two days, no matter what the days of the respective date system is, aren't they? Assigning this to os@openoffice.org - Oliver, I think you fixed this recently in the form letter implementations .... Frank Frank <quote>for the 2 days: between "29 June 2002" and "1 July 2002" are two days, no matter what the days of the respective date system is, aren't they?</quote> Not if you are my accountant <vbg> Philip fixed in srx644h Closed. change subcomponent to 'none' |