Date.CultureInfo = { /* Culture Name */ name: "mt-MT", englishName: "Maltese (Malta)", nativeName: "Malti (Malta)", /* Day Name Strings */ dayNames: ["Il-Ħadd", "It-Tnejn", "It-Tlieta", "L-Erbgħa", "Il-Ħamis", "Il-Ġimgħa", "Is-Sibt"], abbreviatedDayNames: ["Ħad", "Tne", "Tli", "Erb", "Ħam", "Ġim", "Sib"], shortestDayNames: ["Ħad", "Tne", "Tli", "Erb", "Ħam", "Ġim", "Sib"], firstLetterDayNames: ["Ħ", "T", "T", "E", "Ħ", "Ġ", "S"], /* Month Name Strings */ monthNames: ["Jannar", "Frar", "Marzu", "April", "Mejju", "Ġunju", "Lulju", "Awissu", "Settembru", "Ottubru", "Novembru", "Diċembru"], abbreviatedMonthNames: ["Jan", "Fra", "Mar", "Apr", "Mej", "Ġun", "Lul", "Awi", "Set", "Ott", "Nov", "Diċ"], /* AM/PM Designators */ amDesignator: "AM", pmDesignator: "PM", firstDayOfWeek: 1, twoDigitYearMax: 2029, /** * The dateElementOrder is based on the order of the * format specifiers in the formatPatterns.DatePattern. * * Example:
     shortDatePattern    dateElementOrder
     ------------------  ---------------- 
     "M/d/yyyy"          "mdy"
     "dd/MM/yyyy"        "dmy"
     "yyyy-MM-dd"        "ymd"
     
* * The correct dateElementOrder is required by the parser to * determine the expected order of the date elements in the * string being parsed. */ dateElementOrder: "dmy", /* Standard date and time format patterns */ formatPatterns: { shortDate: "dd/MM/yyyy", longDate: "dddd, d' ta\' 'MMMM yyyy", shortTime: "HH:mm:ss", longTime: "HH:mm:ss", fullDateTime: "dddd, d' ta\' 'MMMM yyyy HH:mm:ss", sortableDateTime: "yyyy-MM-ddTHH:mm:ss", universalSortableDateTime: "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ssZ", rfc1123: "ddd, dd MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss GMT", monthDay: "MMMM dd", yearMonth: "MMMM yyyy" }, /** * NOTE: If a string format is not parsing correctly, but * you would expect it parse, the problem likely lies below. * * The following regex patterns control most of the string matching * within the parser. * * The Month name and Day name patterns were automatically generated * and in general should be (mostly) correct. * * Beyond the month and day name patterns are natural language strings. * Example: "next", "today", "months" * * These natural language string may NOT be correct for this culture. * If they are not correct, please translate and edit this file * providing the correct regular expression pattern. * * If you modify this file, please post your revised CultureInfo file * to the Datejs Forum located at http://www.datejs.com/forums/. * * Please mark the subject of the post with [CultureInfo]. Example: * Subject: [CultureInfo] Translated "da-DK" Danish(Denmark) * * We will add the modified patterns to the master source files. * * As well, please review the list of "Future Strings" section below. */ regexPatterns: { jan: /^jan(nar)?/i, feb: /^fra(r)?/i, mar: /^mar(zu)?/i, apr: /^apr(il)?/i, may: /^mej(ju)?/i, jun: /^ġun(ju)?/i, jul: /^lul(ju)?/i, aug: /^awi(ssu)?/i, sep: /^set(tembru)?/i, oct: /^ott(ubru)?/i, nov: /^nov(embru)?/i, dec: /^diċ(embru)?/i, sun: /^il-ħadd/i, mon: /^it-tnejn/i, tue: /^it-tlieta/i, wed: /^l-erbgħa/i, thu: /^il-ħamis/i, fri: /^il-ġimgħa/i, sat: /^is-sibt/i, future: /^next/i, past: /^last|past|prev(ious)?/i, add: /^(\+|aft(er)?|from|hence)/i, subtract: /^(\-|bef(ore)?|ago)/i, yesterday: /^yes(terday)?/i, today: /^t(od(ay)?)?/i, tomorrow: /^tom(orrow)?/i, now: /^n(ow)?/i, millisecond: /^ms|milli(second)?s?/i, second: /^sec(ond)?s?/i, minute: /^mn|min(ute)?s?/i, hour: /^h(our)?s?/i, week: /^w(eek)?s?/i, month: /^m(onth)?s?/i, day: /^d(ay)?s?/i, year: /^y(ear)?s?/i, shortMeridian: /^(a|p)/i, longMeridian: /^(a\.?m?\.?|p\.?m?\.?)/i, timezone: /^((e(s|d)t|c(s|d)t|m(s|d)t|p(s|d)t)|((gmt)?\s*(\+|\-)\s*\d\d\d\d?)|gmt|utc)/i, ordinalSuffix: /^\s*(st|nd|rd|th)/i, timeContext: /^\s*(\:|a(?!u|p)|p)/i }, timezones: [{name:"UTC", offset:"-000"}, {name:"GMT", offset:"-000"}, {name:"EST", offset:"-0500"}, {name:"EDT", offset:"-0400"}, {name:"CST", offset:"-0600"}, {name:"CDT", offset:"-0500"}, {name:"MST", offset:"-0700"}, {name:"MDT", offset:"-0600"}, {name:"PST", offset:"-0800"}, {name:"PDT", offset:"-0700"}] }; /******************** ** Future Strings ** ******************** * * The following list of strings may not be currently being used, but * may be incorporated into the Datejs library later. * * We would appreciate any help translating the strings below. * * If you modify this file, please post your revised CultureInfo file * to the Datejs Forum located at http://www.datejs.com/forums/. * * Please mark the subject of the post with [CultureInfo]. Example: * Subject: [CultureInfo] Translated "da-DK" Danish(Denmark)b * * English Name Translated * ------------------ ----------------- * about about * ago ago * date date * time time * calendar calendar * show show * hourly hourly * daily daily * weekly weekly * bi-weekly bi-weekly * fortnight fortnight * monthly monthly * bi-monthly bi-monthly * quarter quarter * quarterly quarterly * yearly yearly * annual annual * annually annually * annum annum * again again * between between * after after * from now from now * repeat repeat * times times * per per * min (abbrev minute) min * morning morning * noon noon * night night * midnight midnight * mid-night mid-night * evening evening * final final * future future * spring spring * summer summer * fall fall * winter winter * end of end of * end end * long long * short short */