[3.13] gh-89762: Document strftime %G, %V, and %u format specifiers (GH-124572) (#126094)

(cherry picked from commit 85799f1ffd5f285ef93a608b0aaf6acbb464ff9d)

Co-authored-by: RUANG (James Roy) <longjinyii@outlook.com>
diff --git a/Doc/library/time.rst b/Doc/library/time.rst
index a0bf13f..8e29e57 100644
--- a/Doc/library/time.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/time.rst
@@ -483,6 +483,9 @@
    |           |                                                |       |
    |           |                                                |       |
    +-----------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
+   | ``%u``    | Day of the week (Monday is 1; Sunday is 7)     |       |
+   |           | as a decimal number [1, 7].                    |       |
+   +-----------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
    | ``%w``    | Weekday as a decimal number [0(Sunday),6].     |       |
    |           |                                                |       |
    +-----------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
@@ -515,6 +518,16 @@
    | ``%Z``    | Time zone name (no characters if no time zone  |       |
    |           | exists). Deprecated. [1]_                      |       |
    +-----------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
+   | ``%G``    | ISO 8601 year (similar to ``%Y`` but follows   |       |
+   |           | the rules for the ISO 8601 calendar year).     |       |
+   |           | The year starts with the week that contains    |       |
+   |           | the first Thursday of the calendar year.       |       |
+   +-----------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
+   | ``%V``    | ISO 8601 week number (as a decimal number      |       |
+   |           | [01,53]). The first week of the year is the    |       |
+   |           | one that contains the first Thursday of the    |       |
+   |           | year. Weeks start on Monday.                   |       |
+   +-----------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
    | ``%%``    | A literal ``'%'`` character.                   |       |
    +-----------+------------------------------------------------+-------+