# Get number of days since epoch in C++ (cross platform)

How can i get count of days since epoch in C++, i know that i should use mktime function, but i cant understand how to implement it

Thanks!

• Is the mktime() function required? Depending on what you are doing this for, you might want to consider rolling your own solution. If I were to do this, I would start by writing a program which counts the number of days since the beginning of the year. If you are having trouble with that, back up one more step and write a program which counts the number of days since the beginning of the month. (Note that I'm suggesting simplifying the problem. It's always a good idea to find a small problem which you can easily solve and will help towards solving the larger problem. – Code-Apprentice Jan 9 '13 at 19:11
• @Code-Guru, no, mktime is not required – Breakdown Jan 9 '13 at 19:12
• @Breakdown See my edited comment above which gives some tips. – Code-Apprentice Jan 9 '13 at 19:13

Modifying some sample code from cplusplus.com:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>

int main ()
{
time_t seconds;

seconds = time (NULL);
int daysSinceEpoch = seconds/(60*60*24);
printf ("%ld days since January 1, 1970", daysSinceEpoch);

return 0;
}

• Dates and times are different things. A day is not just 24 hours, it is the difference between one date and the next, including leap seconds, daylight savings adjustments, etc. – bames53 Jan 9 '13 at 19:30

Dates aren't easy to work with correctly. The standard library as it stands today doesn't offer the capability to do this correctly. You should use a proper date library, such as boost::date or Howard Hinnant's <date>.

With Hinnant's library the code might look something like this:

date epoch = year(1970)/jan/day(1); // Assuming you're referring to the traditional Unix epoch (some systems such as Cocoa on OS X use the first day of the millenium, Jan 1, 2001 as their epoch)
days d = date::today() - epoch;

• A later version of Howard Hinnant's library is going into C++20. – emsr Feb 22 '19 at 22:29

Begin by getting the current time, with time(NULL). Pass that value to gmtime, which gives you back a tm*. Read the documentation for tm.