rolfk wrote:
Or use the formating string as shown by Phillip Brooks. But I would change it to %<%H%M%S%3u>t since the OP seems to be interested into relative time formatting rather than absolute time formatting.
Message Edited by rolfk on 03-23-2010 09:25 AM
Good catch on the relative time; I'm so used to working with databases and timestamps that I forgot about the significance of the upper/lower case of the 'T/t'