.. leading zeros are required for `frontmatter` to treat them as dates
rather than strings, apparently per the YAML specification.
This was done by script:
```py
import re
import datetime
import pathlib
import sys
import frontmatter
rx = re.compile(r'^(\s*)date_added:.*$', re.M)
for path_str in sys.argv[1:]:
print(path_str)
path = pathlib.Path(path_str)
post = frontmatter.load(path)
date_added = post.get("date_added", "")
if isinstance(date_added, datetime.date):
continue
if isinstance(date_added, str):
try:
date_added = datetime.datetime.strptime(date_added, "%Y-%m-%d")
except ValueError as exc:
print(f"Failed to parse date {date_added} in {path_str}: {exc}")
continue
date_added = date_added.date()
content = path.read_text("utf-8")
new_content = rx.sub(lambda m: f"{m.group(1)}date_added: {date_added}", content)
assert content != new_content
path.write_text(new_content, "utf-8")
```
730 B
730 B
| layout | board_id | title | name | manufacturer | board_url | board_image | date_added | family | features | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| download | imxrt1060_evk | MIMXRT1060-EVK Eval Kit Download | MIMXRT1060-EVK Eval Kit | NXP |
|
imxrt1060_evk.jpg | 2020-01-31 | mimxrt10xx |
The i.MX RT1060 EVK is a 4-layer through-hole USB-powered PCB. At its heart lies the i.MX RT1060 crossover MCU, featuring NXP’s advanced implementation of the Arm® Cortex®-M7 core. This core operates at speeds up to 600 MHz to provide high CPU performance and excellent real-time response.