Board Thread:The Quarters - Q & A/@comment-173.76.247.207-20170521151259/@comment-25085701-20170523193452

Okay. Here's what I've found for you:

1)  'date' is the UNIX epoch standard, aka 'miliseconds since January 1, 1970.'    You can use an epoch converter like this one (here) to see how it works.   It uses GMT.

2) Each date entry looks like this (as you probably know):

{"value":35.181878424281464,"date":1480356974319}

That's a snapshot of the value on that timestamp. If you have a way to compare it to the previous entry, you'll know exactly what you needed to know:

- if the value went up, that's when you clicked the daily.

- if the value went down, you logged in and missed the daily.

- if the value is the same, you logged in, but the daily wasn't due or you're a Rogue that cast Stealth.

Remember that cron doesn't process unless you log in, so you'll never see an entry at midnight local unless you managed to log in exactly then. It can be 3pm in the afternoon when you do, and that's when the timestamp updates for cron.

At least, I think that's what's happening, anyway.