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Calc now uses the Gregorian calendar for all dates,
and uses January 1, 1 AD as its day number 1. * doc/misc/calc.texi (Date Forms): Document this. * lisp/calc/calc-forms.el (math-julian-date-beginning) (math-julian-date-beginning-int): Implement this.
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@ -1,3 +1,9 @@
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2012-11-17 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
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Calc now uses the Gregorian calendar for all dates,
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and uses January 1, 1 AD as its day number 1.
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* calc.texi (Date Forms): Document this.
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2012-11-16 Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>
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* cl.texi (Function Bindings): Clarify that cl-flet is lexical.
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@ -11010,35 +11010,41 @@ You can use the @kbd{v p} (@code{calc-pack}) and @kbd{v u}
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of a date form. @xref{Packing and Unpacking}.
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Date forms can go arbitrarily far into the future or past. Negative
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year numbers represent years BC. Calc uses a combination of the
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Gregorian and Julian calendars, following the history of Great
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Britain and the British colonies. This is the same calendar that
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is used by the @code{cal} program in most Unix implementations.
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year numbers represent years BC. There is no ``year 0''; the day
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before @samp{<Mon Jan 1, +1>} is @samp{<Sun Dec 31, -1>}. These are
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days 1 and 0 respectively in Calc's internal numbering scheme. The
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Gregorian calendar is used for all dates, including dates before the
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Gregorian calendar was invented. Thus Calc's use of the day number
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@mathit{-10000} to represent August 15, 28 BC should be taken with a
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grain of salt.
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@cindex Julian calendar
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@cindex Gregorian calendar
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Some historical background: The Julian calendar was created by
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Julius Caesar in the year 46 BC as an attempt to fix the gradual
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drift caused by the lack of leap years in the calendar used
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until that time. The Julian calendar introduced an extra day in
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Julius Caesar in the year 46 BC as an attempt to fix the confusion
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caused by the irregular Roman calendar that was used before that time.
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The Julian calendar introduced an extra day in
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all years divisible by four. After some initial confusion, the
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calendar was adopted around the year we call 8 AD. Some centuries
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calendar was adopted around the year we call 8 AD, although the years were
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numbered differently and did not necessarily begin on January 1. Some centuries
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later it became apparent that the Julian year of 365.25 days was
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itself not quite right. In 1582 Pope Gregory XIII introduced the
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Gregorian calendar, which added the new rule that years divisible
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by 100, but not by 400, were not to be considered leap years
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despite being divisible by four. Many countries delayed adoption
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of the Gregorian calendar because of religious differences;
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in Britain it was put off until the year 1752, by which time
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the Julian calendar had fallen eleven days behind the true
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seasons. So the switch to the Gregorian calendar in early
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September 1752 introduced a discontinuity: The day after
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Sep 2, 1752 is Sep 14, 1752. Calc follows this convention.
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To take another example, Russia waited until 1918 before
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adopting the new calendar, and thus needed to remove thirteen
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days (between Feb 1, 1918 and Feb 14, 1918). This means that
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Calc's reckoning will be inconsistent with Russian history between
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1752 and 1918, and similarly for various other countries.
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of the Gregorian calendar because of religious differences, and
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used differing year numbers and start-of-year for other reasons;
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for example, in early 1752 England changed the start of its year from
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March 25 to January 1, and in September it switched to the Gregorian
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calendar: in England, the day after December 31, 1750 was January 1,
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1750 and the day after March 24, 1750 was March 25, 1751, but the day
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after December 31, 1751 was January 1, 1752 and the day after
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September 2, 1752 was September 14, 1752. To take another example,
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Russia switched both year numbering and start-of-year in 1700, but did
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not adopt the Gregorian calendar until 1918. Calc's reckoning
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therefore matches English practice starting in 1752 and Russian
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practice starting in 1918, but disagrees with earlier dates in both
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countries.
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Today's timekeepers introduce an occasional ``leap second'' as
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well, but Calc does not take these minor effects into account.
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@ -11046,15 +11052,6 @@ well, but Calc does not take these minor effects into account.
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between, say, @samp{<12:00am Mon Jan 1, 1900>} and
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@samp{<12:00am Sat Jan 1, 2000>}.)
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Calc uses the Julian calendar for all dates before the year 1752,
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including dates BC when the Julian calendar technically had not
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yet been invented. Thus the claim that day number @mathit{-10000} is
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called ``August 16, 28 BC'' should be taken with a grain of salt.
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Please note that there is no ``year 0''; the day before
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@samp{<Sat Jan 1, +1>} is @samp{<Fri Dec 31, -1>}. These are
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days 0 and @mathit{-1} respectively in Calc's internal numbering scheme.
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@cindex Julian day counting
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Another day counting system in common use is, confusingly, also called
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``Julian.'' The Julian day number is the numbers of days since
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@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
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2012-11-17 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
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* calc/calc-forms.el (math-julian-date-beginning)
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(math-julian-date-beginning-int): Implement [new date numbering].
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2012-11-17 Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>
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* descr-text.el (quail-find-key):
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@ -656,13 +656,13 @@ in the Gregorian calendar."
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(setcdr math-fd-dt nil))
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fmt))))
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(defconst math-julian-date-beginning '(float 17214235 -1)
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"The beginning of the Julian calendar,
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as measured in the number of days before January 1 of the year 1AD.")
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(defconst math-julian-date-beginning '(float 17214225 -1)
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"The beginning of the Julian date calendar,
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as measured in the number of days before December 31, 1 BC (Gregorian).")
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(defconst math-julian-date-beginning-int 1721424
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"The beginning of the Julian calendar,
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as measured in the integer number of days before January 1 of the year 1AD.")
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(defconst math-julian-date-beginning-int 1721423
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"The beginning of the Julian date calendar,
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as measured in the integer number of days before December 31, 1 BC (Gregorian).")
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(defun math-format-date-part (x)
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(cond ((stringp x)
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