Within this context TimeTicks are UNIX timestamps. Unix time, or POSIX time, is a system for describing points in time: it is the number of seconds elapsed since midnightUTC of January 1, 1970, not counting leap seconds. It is widely used not only on Unix-like operating systems but also in many other computing systems.
Whereas "Z" stands for the time zone: Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The W3C value space of DateTime is closely related to the dates and times described in ISO 8601.
Available Base Types
Integer Operations
float_definition
Multiexcerpt
MultiExcerptName
float_definition
shouldDisplayInlineCommentsInIncludes
false
A float corresponds to the IEEE single-precision 32-bit floating-point type.
Lexical representation: [white spaces] [+|-][nnn][.nnn][e|E[+|-]nnn] (where white spaces are any tab or space character; nnn may be any number of digits)
Available Base Types
Integer Operations
integer_definition
Multiexcerpt
MultiExcerptName
integer_definition
shouldDisplayInlineCommentsInIncludes
false
The W3C defines integers as "decimal", which represents arbitrary precision decimal numbers.
Available Base Types
Integer Operations
Integer Operations
string_definition
Multiexcerpt
MultiExcerptName
string_definition
shouldDisplayInlineCommentsInIncludes
false
A string is a set of finite-length sequences of a character set (the Bridge uses UTF-8 internally).