Yep, your solution works except the time string (in my case)
is 32 bytes. Therefore:
$timelow = substr($record,0,16);
$timehigh = substr($record,16,32);
&quad_to_epoch("$timelow $timehigh");
However,when I print the $Unix_based_time value with
print scalar localtime($Unix_based_time), the output starts
at 1st Jan 2003 11:00:00 to 23:59:40 and then 2nd Jan 00:00:00
to 10:59:40! The file should start at 00:00:00 Jan 1st and
end at 23:59:40 on the same day...
Regards, Stacy.
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