// Copyright 2016 Google LLC // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (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.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. // Package civil implements types for civil time, a time-zone-independent // representation of time that follows the rules of the proleptic // Gregorian calendar with exactly 24-hour days, 60-minute hours, and 60-second // minutes. // // Because they lack location information, these types do not represent unique // moments or intervals of time. Use time.Time for that purpose. package civil import ( "fmt" "time" ) // A Date represents a date (year, month, day). // // This type does not include location information, and therefore does not // describe a unique 24-hour timespan. type Date struct { Year int // Year (e.g., 2014). Month time.Month // Month of the year (January = 1, ...). Day int // Day of the month, starting at 1. } // DateOf returns the Date in which a time occurs in that time's location. func DateOf(t time.Time) Date { var d Date d.Year, d.Month, d.Day = t.Date() return d } // ParseDate parses a string in RFC3339 full-date format and returns the date value it represents. func ParseDate(s string) (Date, error) { t, err := time.Parse("2006-01-02", s) if err != nil { return Date{}, err } return DateOf(t), nil } // String returns the date in RFC3339 full-date format. func (d Date) String() string { return fmt.Sprintf("%04d-%02d-%02d", d.Year, d.Month, d.Day) } // IsValid reports whether the date is valid. func (d Date) IsValid() bool { return DateOf(d.In(time.UTC)) == d } // In returns the time corresponding to time 00:00:00 of the date in the location. // // In is always consistent with time.Date, even when time.Date returns a time // on a different day. For example, if loc is America/Indiana/Vincennes, then both // time.Date(1955, time.May, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, loc) // and // civil.Date{Year: 1955, Month: time.May, Day: 1}.In(loc) // return 23:00:00 on April 30, 1955. // // In panics if loc is nil. func (d Date) In(loc *time.Location) time.Time { return time.Date(d.Year, d.Month, d.Day, 0, 0, 0, 0, loc) } // AddDays returns the date that is n days in the future. // n can also be negative to go into the past. func (d Date) AddDays(n int) Date { return DateOf(d.In(time.UTC).AddDate(0, 0, n)) } // DaysSince returns the signed number of days between the date and s, not including the end day. // This is the inverse operation to AddDays. func (d Date) DaysSince(s Date) (days int) { // We convert to Unix time so we do not have to worry about leap seconds: // Unix time increases by exactly 86400 seconds per day. deltaUnix := d.In(time.UTC).Unix() - s.In(time.UTC).Unix() return int(deltaUnix / 86400) } // Before reports whether d1 occurs before d2. func (d1 Date) Before(d2 Date) bool { if d1.Year != d2.Year { return d1.Year < d2.Year } if d1.Month != d2.Month { return d1.Month < d2.Month } return d1.Day < d2.Day } // After reports whether d1 occurs after d2. func (d1 Date) After(d2 Date) bool { return d2.Before(d1) } // MarshalText implements the encoding.TextMarshaler interface. // The output is the result of d.String(). func (d Date) MarshalText() ([]byte, error) { return []byte(d.String()), nil } // UnmarshalText implements the encoding.TextUnmarshaler interface. // The date is expected to be a string in a format accepted by ParseDate. func (d *Date) UnmarshalText(data []byte) error { var err error *d, err = ParseDate(string(data)) return err } // A Time represents a time with nanosecond precision. // // This type does not include location information, and therefore does not // describe a unique moment in time. // // This type exists to represent the TIME type in storage-based APIs like BigQuery. // Most operations on Times are unlikely to be meaningful. Prefer the DateTime type. type Time struct { Hour int // The hour of the day in 24-hour format; range [0-23] Minute int // The minute of the hour; range [0-59] Second int // The second of the minute; range [0-59] Nanosecond int // The nanosecond of the second; range [0-999999999] } // TimeOf returns the Time representing the time of day in which a time occurs // in that time's location. It ignores the date. func TimeOf(t time.Time) Time { var tm Time tm.Hour, tm.Minute, tm.Second = t.Clock() tm.Nanosecond = t.Nanosecond() return tm } // ParseTime parses a string and returns the time value it represents. // ParseTime accepts an extended form of the RFC3339 partial-time format. After // the HH:MM:SS part of the string, an optional fractional part may appear, // consisting of a decimal point followed by one to nine decimal digits. // (RFC3339 admits only one digit after the decimal point). func ParseTime(s string) (Time, error) { t, err := time.Parse("15:04:05.999999999", s) if err != nil { return Time{}, err } return TimeOf(t), nil } // String returns the date in the format described in ParseTime. If Nanoseconds // is zero, no fractional part will be generated. Otherwise, the result will // end with a fractional part consisting of a decimal point and nine digits. func (t Time) String() string { s := fmt.Sprintf("%02d:%02d:%02d", t.Hour, t.Minute, t.Second) if t.Nanosecond == 0 { return s } return s + fmt.Sprintf(".%09d", t.Nanosecond) } // IsValid reports whether the time is valid. func (t Time) IsValid() bool { // Construct a non-zero time. tm := time.Date(2, 2, 2, t.Hour, t.Minute, t.Second, t.Nanosecond, time.UTC) return TimeOf(tm) == t } // MarshalText implements the encoding.TextMarshaler interface. // The output is the result of t.String(). func (t Time) MarshalText() ([]byte, error) { return []byte(t.String()), nil } // UnmarshalText implements the encoding.TextUnmarshaler interface. // The time is expected to be a string in a format accepted by ParseTime. func (t *Time) UnmarshalText(data []byte) error { var err error *t, err = ParseTime(string(data)) return err } // A DateTime represents a date and time. // // This type does not include location information, and therefore does not // describe a unique moment in time. type DateTime struct { Date Date Time Time } // Note: We deliberately do not embed Date into DateTime, to avoid promoting AddDays and Sub. // DateTimeOf returns the DateTime in which a time occurs in that time's location. func DateTimeOf(t time.Time) DateTime { return DateTime{ Date: DateOf(t), Time: TimeOf(t), } } // ParseDateTime parses a string and returns the DateTime it represents. // ParseDateTime accepts a variant of the RFC3339 date-time format that omits // the time offset but includes an optional fractional time, as described in // ParseTime. Informally, the accepted format is // YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS[.FFFFFFFFF] // where the 'T' may be a lower-case 't'. func ParseDateTime(s string) (DateTime, error) { t, err := time.Parse("2006-01-02T15:04:05.999999999", s) if err != nil { t, err = time.Parse("2006-01-02t15:04:05.999999999", s) if err != nil { return DateTime{}, err } } return DateTimeOf(t), nil } // String returns the date in the format described in ParseDate. func (dt DateTime) String() string { return dt.Date.String() + "T" + dt.Time.String() } // IsValid reports whether the datetime is valid. func (dt DateTime) IsValid() bool { return dt.Date.IsValid() && dt.Time.IsValid() } // In returns the time corresponding to the DateTime in the given location. // // If the time is missing or ambigous at the location, In returns the same // result as time.Date. For example, if loc is America/Indiana/Vincennes, then // both // time.Date(1955, time.May, 1, 0, 30, 0, 0, loc) // and // civil.DateTime{ // civil.Date{Year: 1955, Month: time.May, Day: 1}}, // civil.Time{Minute: 30}}.In(loc) // return 23:30:00 on April 30, 1955. // // In panics if loc is nil. func (dt DateTime) In(loc *time.Location) time.Time { return time.Date(dt.Date.Year, dt.Date.Month, dt.Date.Day, dt.Time.Hour, dt.Time.Minute, dt.Time.Second, dt.Time.Nanosecond, loc) } // Before reports whether dt1 occurs before dt2. func (dt1 DateTime) Before(dt2 DateTime) bool { return dt1.In(time.UTC).Before(dt2.In(time.UTC)) } // After reports whether dt1 occurs after dt2. func (dt1 DateTime) After(dt2 DateTime) bool { return dt2.Before(dt1) } // MarshalText implements the encoding.TextMarshaler interface. // The output is the result of dt.String(). func (dt DateTime) MarshalText() ([]byte, error) { return []byte(dt.String()), nil } // UnmarshalText implements the encoding.TextUnmarshaler interface. // The datetime is expected to be a string in a format accepted by ParseDateTime func (dt *DateTime) UnmarshalText(data []byte) error { var err error *dt, err = ParseDateTime(string(data)) return err }