Converting epoch time to "real" date/time

Be careful about leap years in your daysInMonth function.

If you want very high performance, you can precompute the pair to get to month+year in one step, and then calculate the day/hour/min/sec.

A good solution is the one in the gmtime source code:

/*
 * gmtime - convert the calendar time into broken down time
 */
/* $Header: gmtime.c,v 1.4 91/04/22 13:20:27 ceriel Exp $ */

#include        <time.h>
#include        <limits.h>
#include        "loc_time.h"

struct tm *
gmtime(register const time_t *timer)
{
        static struct tm br_time;
        register struct tm *timep = &br_time;
        time_t time = *timer;
        register unsigned long dayclock, dayno;
        int year = EPOCH_YR;

        dayclock = (unsigned long)time % SECS_DAY;
        dayno = (unsigned long)time / SECS_DAY;

        timep->tm_sec = dayclock % 60;
        timep->tm_min = (dayclock % 3600) / 60;
        timep->tm_hour = dayclock / 3600;
        timep->tm_wday = (dayno + 4) % 7;       /* day 0 was a thursday */
        while (dayno >= YEARSIZE(year)) {
                dayno -= YEARSIZE(year);
                year++;
        }
        timep->tm_year = year - YEAR0;
        timep->tm_yday = dayno;
        timep->tm_mon = 0;
        while (dayno >= _ytab[LEAPYEAR(year)][timep->tm_mon]) {
                dayno -= _ytab[LEAPYEAR(year)][timep->tm_mon];
                timep->tm_mon++;
        }
        timep->tm_mday = dayno + 1;
        timep->tm_isdst = 0;

        return timep;
}

An easy way (though different than the format you wanted):

std::time_t result = std::time(nullptr);
std::cout << std::asctime(std::localtime(&result));

Output: Wed Sep 21 10:27:52 2011

Notice that the returned result will be automatically concatenated with "\n".. you can remove it using:

std::string::size_type i = res.find("\n");
if (i != std::string::npos)
    res.erase(i, res.length());

Taken from: http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/chrono/c/time


time_t t = unixTime;
cout << ctime(&t) << endl;

The standard library provides functions for doing this. gmtime() or localtime() will convert a time_t (seconds since the epoch, i.e.- Jan 1 1970 00:00:00) into a struct tm. strftime() can then be used to convert a struct tm into a string (char*) based on the format you specify.

see: http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/clibrary/ctime/

Date/time calculations can get tricky. You are much better off using an existing solution rather than trying to roll your own, unless you have a really good reason.