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Tomorrows's Date

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At x=`date +%s` date -r `expr $x + 86400` Or, as the original page suggested, you could use Perl. You could find all that and more scattered across this site in various places if you bothered to look. With a very little effort, almost anyone should be able to figure that out themselves: "man date" is a good start. It might take a little more effort to get to the "date +%s" solution": you might need "man strftime" also. But it is all there. Ahh, but why isn't it all just in one place? Some folks are in a hurry, as we noted, and don't have time to research and think: they just want the costs money. Otherwise, you have to turn the brain on for a few minutes and pay attention. *Originally published at Del.icio.us") | Yahoo! My Web A.P. Lawrence provides SCO Unix and Linux consulting services http://www.pcunix.com

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