int rdatestr(date d, char *str);
</synopsis>
The function receives two arguments, the first one is the date to
- convert (<literal>d</> and the second one is a pointer to the target
+ convert (<literal>d</>) and the second one is a pointer to the target
string. The output format is always <literal>yyyy-mm-dd</>, so you need
to allocate at least 11 bytes (including the zero-byte terminator) for the
string.
</synopsis>
The function receives a pointer to the timestamp variable to convert
(<literal>ts</>) and the string that should hold the result of the
- operation <literal>output</>). It converts <literal>ts</> to its
+ operation (<literal>output</>). It converts <literal>ts</> to its
textual representation according to the SQL standard, which is
be <literal>YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS</literal>.
</para>
</synopsis>
The function receives a pointer to the interval variable to convert
(<literal>i</>) and the string that should hold the result of the
- operation <literal>str</>). It converts <literal>i</> to its
+ operation (<literal>str</>). It converts <literal>i</> to its
textual representation according to the SQL standard, which is
be <literal>YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS</literal>.
</para>