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On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 3:25 AM, Vern Hamberg wrote:
I'm still curious - how would you use this "job time"? First, do
you want it to be the time at which the job started? To me, that is
not as interesting or useful as the date on which the job started.
Very reasonable questions. Honestly, when I hear the term "job
date", what goes through my mind is "date the job started". To me,
it doesn't make a lot of sense to be able to futz with this value.
At least, in anything that I would personally write, I would
*either* want the actual start date of the job, *or* the current
system date. If my logic needs to handle the case where the execution
of the job spans multiple calendar days, then I should compare the
actual start date with the current system date and handle the
situation appropriately. I have absolutely no interest in some
fabricated date.
Thus, for my purposes, the concept of "job date" should not be
distinct from "start date", and "start date" should absolutely not
be modifiable.
Thus, for my purposes, the concept of "job time" would simply be
derived from, or a component of, the "job timestamp", which would be
the actual date and time at which the job started.
And yet there is this modifiable job date attribute, which clearly
*is* distinct from the actual job start date. So I have to imagine
how reasonable this is. And my conclusion is, however reasonable it
is to have a futzable job date, it is equally reasonable to have a
futzable job time. (Both of these would be components of the
futzable "job timestamp".)
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