107

I'm trying to collect information from a system and I need to get the current time in hours and minutes.

Currently I have:

date | awk '{print $4}'

which outputs something like:

16:18:54

How do I chop off the seconds?

2
  • 9
    why use awk? date supports a wide variety of formatting characters and would be happy to generate the EXACT output you want, without extra tools. date +%H:%M
    – Marc B
    Dec 3, 2013 at 21:26
  • 9
    date +%H:%M ?
    – jfs
    Dec 3, 2013 at 21:26

6 Answers 6

215

Provide a format string:

date +"%H:%M"

Running man date will give all the format options

%a     locale's abbreviated weekday name (e.g., Sun)
%A     locale's full weekday name (e.g., Sunday)
%b     locale's abbreviated month name (e.g., Jan)
%B     locale's full month name (e.g., January)
%c     locale's date and time (e.g., Thu Mar  3 23:05:25 2005)
%C     century; like %Y, except omit last two digits (e.g., 20)
%d     day of month (e.g., 01)
%D     date; same as %m/%d/%y
%e     day of month, space padded; same as %_d
%F     full date; same as %Y-%m-%d
%g     last two digits of year of ISO week number (see %G)
%G     year of ISO week number (see %V); normally useful only with %V
%h     same as %b
%H     hour (00..23)
%I     hour (01..12)
%j     day of year (001..366)
%k     hour, space padded ( 0..23); same as %_H
%l     hour, space padded ( 1..12); same as %_I
%m     month (01..12)
%M     minute (00..59)
%n     a newline
%N     nanoseconds (000000000..999999999)
%p     locale's equivalent of either AM or PM; blank if not known
%P     like %p, but lower case
%r     locale's 12-hour clock time (e.g., 11:11:04 PM)
%R     24-hour hour and minute; same as %H:%M
%s     seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
%S     second (00..60)
%t     a tab
%T     time; same as %H:%M:%S
%u     day of week (1..7); 1 is Monday
%U     week number of year, with Sunday as first day of week (00..53)
%V     ISO week number, with Monday as first day of week (01..53)
%w     day of week (0..6); 0 is Sunday
%W     week number of year, with Monday as first day of week (00..53)
%x     locale's date representation (e.g., 12/31/99)
%X     locale's time representation (e.g., 23:13:48)
%y     last two digits of year (00..99)
%Y     year
%z     +hhmm numeric time zone (e.g., -0400)
%:z    +hh:mm numeric time zone (e.g., -04:00)
%::z   +hh:mm:ss numeric time zone (e.g., -04:00:00)
%:::z  numeric time zone with : to necessary precision (e.g., -04, +05:30)
%Z     alphabetic time zone abbreviation (e.g., EDT)
4
  • 1
    Good example: date +"%Y%d%d_%H:%M:%S"
    – Smeterlink
    Sep 5, 2022 at 22:01
  • 1
    +1 but, note: *BSD date uses slightly different format operators. See man.freebsd.org/cgi/… for a list.
    – B. Shea
    Apr 21, 2023 at 2:48
  • 1
    @Smeterlink is it date +"%Y%d%m_%H:%M:%S" ?
    – M. Gopal
    Jul 6, 2023 at 11:29
  • @M.Gopal actually it is. Good catch!
    – Smeterlink
    Jul 6, 2023 at 18:50
11

I have another solution for your question .

In the first when use date the output is like this :

Thu 28 Jan 2021 22:29:40 IST

Then if you want only to show current time in hours and minutes you can use this command :

date | cut -d " " -f5 | cut -d ":" -f1-2 

Then the output :

22:29
5

you can use command

date | awk '{print $4}'| cut -d ':' -f3

as you mentioned using only the date|awk '{print $4}' pipeline gives you something like this

20:18:19

so as we can see if we want to extract some part of this string then we need a delimiter , for our case it is :, so we decide to chop on the basis of :. Now this delimiter will chop the string into three parts i.e. 20 ,18 and 19 , as we want the second one we use -f2 in our command. to sum up ,

cut : chops some string based on delimeter.

-d : delimeter (here :)

-f2 : the chopped off token that we want.

5

With bash version >= 4.2:

printf "%(%H:%M)T\n"

or

printf -v foo "%(%H:%M)T\n"
echo "$foo"

See: man bash

1
  • bash 4.2 was released in 2011, so this should be the default answer by now. Nov 26, 2022 at 21:38
4

Could also potentially use this script to use the system time in a variable

now=$(date +"%m_%d_%Y_%M:%S")

Which outputs as

12_07_2020_34:21

3
date +%H:%M

Would be easier, I think :). If you really wanted to chop off the seconds, you could have done

date | sed 's/.* \([0-9]*:[0-9]*\):[0-9]*.*/\1/'

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.