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    How to change/convert the format of a timestamp?

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    • Eko palypseE
      Eko palypse @Alan Kilborn
      last edited by

      @Alan-Kilborn

      actually I’m trying to avoid function lookups as those are expensive, especially when it involves
      Python->C->Python conversion. But I must admit, in this case I don’t think that I gain any performance improvement, it might be even slower. Let’s test it. Will come back.

      Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • Alan KilbornA
        Alan Kilborn @Eko palypse
        last edited by

        @Eko-palypse

        Okay…so I didn’t follow any of that, but I look forward to the come back. :)

        Eko palypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Eko palypseE
          Eko palypse @Alan Kilborn
          last edited by

          @Alan-Kilborn

          so it is still a little bit faster - to be honest, haven’t expected it.

          looped 1000 times over the same text
          16.7720000744 <-- return m.group(0)
          16.6819999218 <- return ‘{}:{}’.format(*parts[:])

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • PeterJonesP
            PeterJones
            last edited by

            My two comments would be:

            1. if min > 60: = if the data is 60:00.000, it wouldn’t change. Make it if min >=60:
            2. If the OP (or someone else) has mixed data, or had partially changed them, and came back later and tried the same script, weird stuff will happen. I’d recommend: editor.rereplace('(?<![:\d])\d+:\d+\.\d+',change_format), which adds a negative lookbehind to not match if there’s a colon or another digit before the \d+
            Eko palypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • Eko palypseE
              Eko palypse @PeterJones
              last edited by

              @PeterJones

              YES - this is a bug it should > 59 - omg.
              About mixed data you are right but this is always the question what if it looked like
              hh.mm.ss.msec …

              Meta ChuhM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • PeterJonesP
                PeterJones
                last edited by

                @Eko-palypse ,

                Indeed, there are always more formats that might exist. I’ve only seen colon-separated in .srt files, so I think that keeping it generic enough that it won’t mess up an existing .srt, even if it does have some with hours and some without.

                BTW: I had forgotten why I included the [:\d] rather than just : in my negative lookbehind: without the \d in the character class, 1:15:00.000 (which shouldn’t match) would partially match on 5:00.000, which would be even worse.

                And running a test with 1:15:00.000, even with your simpler expression, works correctly (ie, doesn’t try to change it) – ahh, that’s because the minutes are less than 60. I guess unless there’s a strange 1:65:00.000, yours won’t be a problem. I guess yours is generic enough.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • Meta ChuhM
                  Meta Chuh moderator @Eko palypse
                  last edited by

                  @Eko-palypse

                  I’m trying to avoid function lookups as those are expensive …

                  yes, i’m a bit short on money too at the moment … and don’t even dare to give me an (s.h) for this comment 😉

                  Eko palypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • Eko palypseE
                    Eko palypse @Meta Chuh
                    last edited by

                    @Meta-Chuh

                    :-D - always reminds me of this

                    Meta ChuhM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • Meta ChuhM
                      Meta Chuh moderator @Eko palypse
                      last edited by

                      @Eko-palypse

                      singing: ahaaaa, ahahahaaa … all the things i could do … ;-)

                      Eko palypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Eko palypseE
                        Eko palypse @Meta Chuh
                        last edited by

                        @Meta-Chuh

                        I don’t understand all of this but what I got makes me laughing … :-D

                        Meta ChuhM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • Meta ChuhM
                          Meta Chuh moderator @Eko palypse
                          last edited by

                          @Eko-palypse
                          i also didn’t understand many of weird al yankovic’s insider jokes, but he made a lot of 80’s songs parodies, a funny one was “fat”, a parody of michael jacksons “bad” … or at least it used to be funny to me when i was a kid ;-)

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Meta ChuhM
                            Meta Chuh moderator @Dana Wright
                            last edited by

                            btw: my apologies to you @Dana-Wright if you had to read everything after your “Worked like a charm! Thank you very much!” and eko’s explanation.

                            sometimes (but very few) we tend to have a little “after work chat” between regulars in public, which can be a bit off topic from time to time. i hope you didn’t mind.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • Meta ChuhM
                              Meta Chuh moderator
                              last edited by Meta Chuh

                              one more song and then it’s enough for today:

                              >>> here’s a song <<< for @Scott-Sumner 😪😉😂

                              Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • Alan KilbornA
                                Alan Kilborn @Meta Chuh
                                last edited by

                                @Meta-Chuh

                                As valuable as Scott’s (and Claudia’s) posts were, we have some really good new posters about scripting (example Eko, and Peter is developing as a Python person), so let’s not be too sad if they decide not to return.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • guy038G
                                  guy038
                                  last edited by guy038

                                  Hello, @dana-wright, @eko-palypse, @alan-kilborn, @meta-chuh, @peterjones and All,

                                  Just a bit late, but here are two regexes S/R which could achieve the goal !

                                  Note that, regarding the initial timestamps, I will use the convention [M]MM:SS.mmm, where :

                                  • [M]MM represents the number of minutes, from 00 to 119/179, with two or three digits

                                  • SS represents the number of seconds, from 00 to 59, with two digits

                                  • mmm represents the number of milliseconds, from 000 to 999, with three digits


                                  Case A) If your file contains timestamps syntaxes, from 00:00.000 to 119:59.999, only ( so 0 <[M]MM < 2 hours ) , one solution could be :

                                  • SEARCH A   (?<!:)(?:([0-5])|(6)|(7)|(8)|(9)|(10)|(11))(\d:\d{2}\.\d{3})(?=\s)

                                  • REPLACE A (?{1}00:01):(?1\1)(?{2}0)(?{3}1)(?{4}2)(?{5}3)(?{6}4)(?{7}5)\8

                                  Case B) If your file contains timestamps syntaxes, from 00:00.000 to 179:59.999, only ( so 0 < [M]MM < 3 hours ), a longer S/R is :

                                  • SEARCH B   (?<!:)(?:([0-5])|((6)|(7)|(8)|(9)|(10)|(11))|((12)|(13)|(14)|(15)|(16)|(17)))(\d:\d{2}\.\d{3})(?=\s)

                                  • REPLACE B (?{1}00)(?{2}01)(?{9}02):(?1\1)(?{3}0)(?{4}1)(?{5}2)(?{6}3)(?{7}4)(?{8}5)(?{10}0)(?{11}1)(?{12}2)(?{13}3)(?{14}4)(?{15}5)$16


                                  As usual :

                                  • Check the Wrap around option

                                  • Select the Regular expression search mode

                                  • Click on the Replace All button

                                  Best Regards

                                  guy038

                                  P. S.

                                  For instance :

                                  • With the regexes A, the initial text, below :
                                  00:00.000
                                  23:52.984
                                  39:43.529
                                  59:59.999
                                  60:00.000
                                  78:08.168
                                  91:38.524
                                  103:05.216
                                  111:41.465
                                  119:59.999
                                  

                                  becomes :

                                  00:00:00.000
                                  00:23:52.984
                                  00:39:43.529
                                  00:59:59.999
                                  01:00:00.000
                                  01:18:08.168
                                  01:31:38.524
                                  01:43:05.216
                                  01:51:41.465
                                  01:59:59.999
                                  
                                  • With the regexes B, the following text :
                                  00:00.000
                                  23:52.984
                                  39:43.529
                                  59:59.999
                                  60:00.000
                                  78:08.168
                                  91:38.524
                                  103:05.216
                                  111:41.465
                                  119:59.999
                                  120:00.000
                                  147:33.150
                                  160:00.058
                                  179:59.999
                                  

                                  becomes :

                                  00:00:00.000
                                  00:23:52.984
                                  00:39:43.529
                                  00:59:59.999
                                  01:00:00.000
                                  01:18:08.168
                                  01:31:38.524
                                  01:43:05.216
                                  01:51:41.465
                                  01:59:59.999
                                  02:00:00.000
                                  02:27:33.150
                                  02:40:00.058
                                  02:59:59.999
                                  
                                  Meta ChuhM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • Meta ChuhM
                                    Meta Chuh moderator @guy038
                                    last edited by

                                    @guy038
                                    it’s never too late, if people care … and thankfully many do 😃
                                    thumbs up 👍

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • PeterJonesP
                                      PeterJones
                                      last edited by

                                      Thank you, @guy038. I had been trying the notation similar to (?(1)00:01) in the replace, rather than (?{1}00:01), which is why I wasn’t able to get the conditional to work right.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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