[Libreoffice-commits] help.git: source/text

Eike Rathke erack at redhat.com
Wed Jun 1 11:36:27 UTC 2016


 source/text/scalc/01/04060102.xhp        |    2 +-
 source/text/scalc/01/func_date.xhp       |    2 +-
 source/text/scalc/01/func_weeknumadd.xhp |    2 +-
 3 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

New commits:
commit d2dbd0dacb5c653680ed94d6a2ebabd52e300a0a
Author: Eike Rathke <erack at redhat.com>
Date:   Wed Jun 1 13:34:34 2016 +0200

    eliminate use of locale dependent date strings where possible
    
    ... unless used in input or formatting example.
    
    Change-Id: Ibda8fdf6db62b61ec4bb0e2e6bfd096f37849916

diff --git a/source/text/scalc/01/04060102.xhp b/source/text/scalc/01/04060102.xhp
index 3e7a4fc..09f3bf7 100644
--- a/source/text/scalc/01/04060102.xhp
+++ b/source/text/scalc/01/04060102.xhp
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@
 <paragraph role="warning" id="par_id1953489" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="NEW">When you copy and paste cells containing date values between different spreadsheets, both spreadsheet documents must be set to the same date base. If date bases differ, the displayed date values will change!</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="heading" id="hd_id757469" xml-lang="en-US" level="2" l10n="NEW">Two digits years</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3149720" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="U" oldref="183">In <switchinline select="sys"><caseinline select="MAC"><emph>%PRODUCTNAME - Preferences</emph></caseinline><defaultinline><emph>Tools - Options</emph></defaultinline></switchinline><emph> - $[officename] - General</emph> you find the area <emph>Year (two digits)</emph>. This sets the period for which two-digit information applies. Note that changes made here have an effect on some of the following functions.</paragraph>
-<paragraph role="note" id="par_id3150654" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="U" oldref="185">When entering dates, slashes or dashes used as date separators may be interpreted as arithmetic operators. Therefore, dates entered in this format are not always recognized as dates and result in erroneous calculations. To keep dates from being interpreted as parts of formulas, place them in quotation marks, for example, "07/20/54".</paragraph>
+<paragraph role="note" id="par_id3150654" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="U" oldref="185">When entering dates as part of formulas, slashes or dashes used as date separators are interpreted as arithmetic operators. Therefore, dates entered in this format are not recognized as dates and result in erroneous calculations. To keep dates from being interpreted as parts of formulas use the DATE function, for example, DATE(1954;7;20), or place the date in quotation marks and use the ISO 8601 notation, for example, "1954-07-20". Avoid using locale dependent date formats such as "07/20/54", the calculation may produce errors if the document is loaded under different locale settings.</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="heading" id="par_idN1067A" xml-lang="en-US" level="2" l10n="NEW">Functions</paragraph>
 <sort order="asc">
 <section id="workday">
diff --git a/source/text/scalc/01/func_date.xhp b/source/text/scalc/01/func_date.xhp
index d56396f..aa318eb 100644
--- a/source/text/scalc/01/func_date.xhp
+++ b/source/text/scalc/01/func_date.xhp
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@
 <emph>Month</emph> is an integer indicating the month.</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3153183" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="CHG" oldref="9">
 <emph>Day</emph> is an integer indicating the day of the month.</paragraph>
-<paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3156260" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="CHG" oldref="10">If the values for month and day are out of bounds, they are carried over to the next digit. If you enter <item type="input">=DATE(00;12;31)</item> the result will be 12/31/00. If, on the other hand, you enter <item type="input">=DATE(00;13;31)</item> the result will be 1/31/01.</paragraph>
+<paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3156260" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="CHG" oldref="10">If the values for month and day are out of bounds, they are carried over to the next digit. If you enter <item type="input">=DATE(00;12;31)</item> the result will be 2000-12-31. If, on the other hand, you enter <item type="input">=DATE(00;13;31)</item> the result will be 2001-01-31.</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="heading" id="hd_id3147477" xml-lang="en-US" level="3" l10n="U" oldref="12">Example</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3152589" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="CHG" oldref="16">
 <item type="input">=DATE(00;1;31)</item> yields 1/31/00 if the cell format setting is MM/DD/YY.</paragraph>
diff --git a/source/text/scalc/01/func_weeknumadd.xhp b/source/text/scalc/01/func_weeknumadd.xhp
index de257e6..4f0a9a1 100644
--- a/source/text/scalc/01/func_weeknumadd.xhp
+++ b/source/text/scalc/01/func_weeknumadd.xhp
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@
 <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3154098" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="U" oldref="227">
 <emph>ReturnType</emph> is 1 for week beginning on a Sunday, 2 for week beginning on a Monday.</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="heading" id="hd_id3152886" xml-lang="en-US" level="3" l10n="U" oldref="228">Example</paragraph>
-<paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3149973" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="U" oldref="229">In which week number does 12/24/2001 fall?</paragraph>
+<paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3149973" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="U" oldref="229">In which week number does 2001-12-24 fall?</paragraph>
 <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id3149914" xml-lang="en-US" l10n="U" oldref="230">
 <item type="input">=WEEKNUM_EXCEL2003(DATE(2001;12;24);1)</item> returns 52.</paragraph>
 </body>


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