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/**
* The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License Version 1.1
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/
* Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis,
* WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
* specific language governing rights and limitations under the License.
*
* The Original Code is "DTM.java". Description:
*
*
* The Initial Developer of the Original Code is University Health Network. Copyright (C)
* 2001. All Rights Reserved.
*
* Contributor(s): ______________________________________.
*
* Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of the
* GNU General Public License (the �GPL�), in which case the provisions of the GPL are
* applicable instead of those above. If you wish to allow use of your version of this
* file only under the terms of the GPL and not to allow others to use your version
* of this file under the MPL, indicate your decision by deleting the provisions above
* and replace them with the notice and other provisions required by the GPL License.
* If you do not delete the provisions above, a recipient may use your version of
* this file under either the MPL or the GPL.
*
*/
package ca.uhn.hl7v2.model.v271.datatype;
import ca.uhn.hl7v2.model.Message;
/**
* Note: The class description below has been excerpted from the Hl7 2.4 documentation. Sectional
* references made below also refer to the same documentation.
*
* Format: YYYY[MM[DD[HHMM[SS[.S[S[S[S]]]]]]]][+/-ZZZZ]^
* Contains the exact time of an event, including the date and time. The date portion of a time stamp follows the rules of a
* date field and the time portion follows the rules of a time field. The time zone (+/-ZZZZ) is represented as +/-HHMM
* offset from UTC (formerly Greenwich Mean Time (GMT)), where +0000 or -0000 both represent UTC (without offset).
* The specific data representations used in the HL7 encoding rules are compatible with ISO 8824-1987(E).
* In prior versions of HL7, an optional second component indicates the degree of precision of the time stamp (Y = year, L
* = month, D = day, H = hour, M = minute, S = second). This optional second component is retained only for purposes of
* backward compatibility.
* By site-specific agreement, YYYYMMDD[HHMM[SS[.S[S[S[S]]]]]][+/-ZZZZ]^ may be used
* where backward compatibility must be maintained.
* In the current and future versions of HL7, the precision is indicated by limiting the number of digits used, unless the
* optional second component is present. Thus, YYYY is used to specify a precision of "year," YYYYMM specifies a
* precision of "month," YYYYMMDD specifies a precision of "day," YYYYMMDDHH is used to specify a precision of
* "hour," YYYYMMDDHHMM is used to specify a precision of "minute," YYYYMMDDHHMMSS is used to specify a
* precision of seconds, and YYYYMMDDHHMMSS.SSSS is used to specify a precision of ten thousandths of a second.
* In each of these cases, the time zone is an optional component. Note that if the time zone is not included, the timezone
* defaults to that of the local time zone of the sender. Also note that a TS valued field with the HHMM part set to "0000"
* represents midnight of the night extending from the previous day to the day given by the YYYYMMDD part (see example
* below). Maximum length of the time stamp is 26. Examples:
* |19760704010159-0500|
* 1:01:59 on July 4, 1976 in the Eastern Standard Time zone (USA).
* |19760704010159-0400|
* 1:01:59 on July 4, 1976 in the Eastern Daylight Saving Time zone (USA).
* |198807050000|
* Midnight of the night extending from July 4 to July 5, 1988 in the local time zone of the sender.
* |19880705|
* Same as prior example, but precision extends only to the day. Could be used for a birthdate, if the time of birth is
* unknown.
* |19981004010159+0100|
* 1:01:59 on October 4, 1998 in Amsterdam, NL. (Time zone=+0100).
* The HL7 Standard strongly recommends that all systems routinely send the time zone offset but does not require it. All
* HL7 systems are required to accept the time zone offset, but its implementation is application specific. For many
* applications the time of interest is the local time of the sender. For example, an application in the Eastern Standard Time
* zone receiving notification of an admission that takes place at 11:00 PM in San Francisco on December 11 would prefer
* to treat the admission as having occurred on December 11 rather than advancing the date to December 12.
* Note: The time zone [+/-ZZZZ], when used, is restricted to legally-defined time zones and is represented in HHMM
* format.
* One exception to this rule would be a clinical system that processed patient data collected in a clinic and a nearby hospital
* that happens to be in a different time zone. Such applications may choose to convert the data to a common
* representation. Similar concerns apply to the transitions to and from daylight saving time. HL7 supports such requirements
* by requiring that the time zone information be present when the information is sent. It does not, however, specify which of
* the treatments discussed here will be applied by the receiving system.
* @author Neal Acharya
*/
public class DTM extends ca.uhn.hl7v2.model.primitive.TSComponentOne {
/**
* @param theMessage message to which this Type belongs
*/
public DTM(Message theMessage) {
super(theMessage);
}
/**
* @return "2.7.1"
*/
public String getVersion() {
return "2.7.1";
}
}