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Coding, syntax & commands
1500 hundred? That would confuse the heck out of me.
>Living in a town near a base, I still hear military time on a regular basis. It is different, but after spending so much time in the military you get used to it. If you need to meet someone at 4:30am, you would say "oh four thirty" and 3:00pm would be '1500 hundred.' There is a little bit of 'slang' expressed sometimes, for instance, it is common to say in lieu of 12:30am in civilian time (0030 in military): 'oh dark thirty.'
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>>>>* The rest of the logic should carry on, don't forget to add :
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>>>yep, military time is expressed from 0001 - 2400. 0101 is 1:01 am.... Always zeros and always 4 digits without the colon.
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>>Great. BTW, see my updated reply. For right now I give up, since I need to do something else, besides there were better functions for the original requiremens (non military time, but just time in 24 hours format).
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