| #include "Python.h" |
| #include "_time.h" |
| |
| /* Exposed in timefuncs.h. */ |
| time_t |
| _PyTime_DoubleToTimet(double x) |
| { |
| time_t result; |
| double diff; |
| |
| result = (time_t)x; |
| /* How much info did we lose? time_t may be an integral or |
| * floating type, and we don't know which. If it's integral, |
| * we don't know whether C truncates, rounds, returns the floor, |
| * etc. If we lost a second or more, the C rounding is |
| * unreasonable, or the input just doesn't fit in a time_t; |
| * call it an error regardless. Note that the original cast to |
| * time_t can cause a C error too, but nothing we can do to |
| * work around that. |
| */ |
| diff = x - (double)result; |
| if (diff <= -1.0 || diff >= 1.0) { |
| PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, |
| "timestamp out of range for platform time_t"); |
| result = (time_t)-1; |
| } |
| return result; |
| } |