XFA Specification
Chapter 24, Picture Clause Specification
Picture Clause Reference
916
Symbol
e
Is the picture symbol for …
1 digit (1-7) day of the week, where 1 = Monday. This symbol is used in the context of
the ISO Week Date format, where weeks start on Mondays rather than Sundays.
Note:
Expressions of the form
eee
and
eeee
are not supported because they duplicate
the capability of the date picture symbols
EEE
and
EEEE
.
g
gg
ggg
G
Y
YY
YYYY
w
Alternate-era name of the prevailing locale, represented using alternate-era style 1. This
symbol is used only in Asian locales. This symbol is more fully described on
page 917
Alternate-era name of the prevailing locale, represented using alternate-era style 2. This
symbol is used only in Asian locales. This symbol is more fully described on
page 917
Alternate-era name of the prevailing locale, represented using alternate-era style 3. This
symbol is used only in Asian locales. This symbol is more fully described on
page 917
Christian era name (BC or AD).
1- or 2-digit year, used in the context of Asian alternate eras. This symbol is more fully
described on
page 918.
2-digit year, where 00 = 2000, 29 = 2029, 30 = 1930, and 99 = 1999.
4-digit year.
1-digit (0-5) week of the month. Week 1 of a month is the earliest set of
four
contiguous
days in that month that ends on a Saturday.
July 2004
Su Mo Tu We Th
1
4
5
6
7
8
Fr Sa
2
3
0
1
2
3
4
Week number
9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
WW
2-digit (01-53)
ISO-8601
week of the year. Week 01 of a year is the week containing
January 4.
See also
“Global Picture-Clause Symbols” on page 902,
which describes the symbols "
?
",
"
*
", and "
+
".
Asian Date Symbols
The following table describes date symbols used primarily in Asian locales.
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