rustfmt'ed src/lib.rs (only).
This commit is contained in:
parent
1f7fd95020
commit
d3384780d0
|
@ -4,6 +4,7 @@ and also the following people (in ascending order):
|
|||
Colin Ray <r.colinray@gmail.com>
|
||||
Corey Farwell <coreyf@rwell.org>
|
||||
Dan <dan@ebip.co.uk>
|
||||
David Hewson <dev@daveid.co.uk>
|
||||
David Ross <daboross@daboross.net>
|
||||
Eunchong Yu <kroisse@gmail.com>
|
||||
Huon Wilson <dbau.pp+github@gmail.com>
|
||||
|
|
9
Makefile
9
Makefile
|
@ -14,18 +14,17 @@ readme: README.md
|
|||
|
||||
README.md: src/lib.rs
|
||||
# really, really sorry for this mess.
|
||||
awk '/^# Chrono /{print "[Chrono][doc]",$$3}' $< > $@
|
||||
awk '/^# Chrono /{print "[Chrono][doc]",$$3}' $< | sed 's/./=/g' >> $@
|
||||
awk '/^\/\/! # Chrono /{print "[Chrono][doc]",$$4}' $< > $@
|
||||
awk '/^\/\/! # Chrono /{print "[Chrono][doc]",$$4}' $< | sed 's/./=/g' >> $@
|
||||
echo >> $@
|
||||
echo '[![Chrono on Travis CI][travis-image]][travis]' >> $@
|
||||
echo >> $@
|
||||
echo '[travis-image]: https://travis-ci.org/lifthrasiir/rust-chrono.png' >> $@
|
||||
echo '[travis]: https://travis-ci.org/lifthrasiir/rust-chrono' >> $@
|
||||
awk '/^# Chrono /,/^## /' $< | tail -n +2 | sed '$$d' | sed '$$d' >> $@
|
||||
echo >> $@
|
||||
awk '/^\/\/! # Chrono /,/^\/\/! ## /' $< | cut -b 5- | grep -v '^#' >> $@
|
||||
echo '[Complete Documentation][doc]' >> $@
|
||||
echo >> $@
|
||||
echo '[doc]: https://lifthrasiir.github.io/rust-chrono/' >> $@
|
||||
echo >> $@
|
||||
awk '/^## /,/^\*\/$$/' $< | grep -v '^# ' | sed '$$d' >> $@
|
||||
awk '/^\/\/! ## /,!/^\/\/!/' $< | cut -b 5- | grep -v '^# ' >> $@
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
12
README.md
12
README.md
|
@ -7,7 +7,8 @@
|
|||
[travis]: https://travis-ci.org/lifthrasiir/rust-chrono
|
||||
|
||||
Date and time handling for Rust. (also known as `rust-chrono`)
|
||||
It aims to be a feature-complete superset of the [time](https://github.com/rust-lang/time) library.
|
||||
It aims to be a feature-complete superset of
|
||||
the [time](https://github.com/rust-lang/time) library.
|
||||
In particular,
|
||||
|
||||
* Chrono strictly adheres to ISO 8601.
|
||||
|
@ -173,7 +174,8 @@ Parsing can be done with three methods:
|
|||
|
||||
3. `Offset::datetime_from_str` is similar but returns `DateTime` of given offset.
|
||||
When the explicit offset is missing from the input, it simply uses given offset.
|
||||
It issues an error when the input contains an explicit offset different from the current offset.
|
||||
It issues an error when the input contains an explicit offset different
|
||||
from the current offset.
|
||||
|
||||
More detailed control over the parsing process is available via `format` module.
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -191,7 +193,8 @@ assert_eq!("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00".parse::<DateTime<FixedOffset>>(), Ok(fixe
|
|||
// method 2
|
||||
assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_str("2014-11-28 21:00:09 +09:00", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z"),
|
||||
Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_rfc2822("Fri, 28 Nov 2014 21:00:09 +0900"), Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_rfc2822("Fri, 28 Nov 2014 21:00:09 +0900"),
|
||||
Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_rfc3339("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00"), Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
|
||||
// method 3
|
||||
|
@ -253,7 +256,8 @@ Time types are limited in the nanosecond accuracy.
|
|||
Leap seconds are supported in the representation but Chrono doesn't try to make use of them.
|
||||
(The main reason is that leap seconds are not really predictable.)
|
||||
Almost *every* operation over the possible leap seconds will ignore them.
|
||||
Consider using `NaiveDateTime` with the implicit TAI (International Atomic Time) scale if you want.
|
||||
Consider using `NaiveDateTime` with the implicit TAI (International Atomic Time) scale
|
||||
if you want.
|
||||
|
||||
Chrono inherently does not support an inaccurate or partial date and time representation.
|
||||
Any operation that can be ambiguous will return `None` in such cases.
|
||||
|
|
551
src/lib.rs
551
src/lib.rs
|
@ -2,269 +2,269 @@
|
|||
// Copyright (c) 2014-2015, Kang Seonghoon.
|
||||
// See README.md and LICENSE.txt for details.
|
||||
|
||||
/*!
|
||||
|
||||
# Chrono 0.2.17
|
||||
|
||||
Date and time handling for Rust. (also known as `rust-chrono`)
|
||||
It aims to be a feature-complete superset of the [time](https://github.com/rust-lang/time) library.
|
||||
In particular,
|
||||
|
||||
* Chrono strictly adheres to ISO 8601.
|
||||
* Chrono is timezone-aware by default, with separate timezone-naive types.
|
||||
* Chrono is space-optimal and (while not being the primary goal) reasonably efficient.
|
||||
|
||||
There were several previous attempts to bring a good date and time library to Rust,
|
||||
which Chrono builts upon and should acknowledge:
|
||||
|
||||
* [Initial research on
|
||||
the wiki](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-wiki-backup/blob/master/Lib-datetime.md)
|
||||
* Dietrich Epp's [datetime-rs](https://github.com/depp/datetime-rs)
|
||||
* Luis de Bethencourt's [rust-datetime](https://github.com/luisbg/rust-datetime)
|
||||
|
||||
## Usage
|
||||
|
||||
Put this in your `Cargo.toml`:
|
||||
|
||||
```toml
|
||||
[dependencies]
|
||||
chrono = "0.2"
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
And put this in your crate root:
|
||||
|
||||
```rust
|
||||
extern crate chrono;
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
## Overview
|
||||
|
||||
### Duration
|
||||
|
||||
Chrono used to have a `Duration` type, which represents the time span.
|
||||
This is a simple reexport of
|
||||
[`time::Duration`](http://doc.rust-lang.org/time/time/struct.Duration.html) type
|
||||
provided by crates.io `time` crate (which originally comes from Chrono).
|
||||
|
||||
### Date and Time
|
||||
|
||||
Chrono provides a `DateTime` type for the combined date and time.
|
||||
|
||||
`DateTime`, among others, is timezone-aware and
|
||||
must be constructed from the `TimeZone` object.
|
||||
`DateTime`s with different time zones do not mix, but can be converted to each other.
|
||||
|
||||
You can get the current date and time in the UTC time zone (`UTC::now()`)
|
||||
or in the local time zone (`Local::now()`).
|
||||
|
||||
~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
use chrono::*;
|
||||
|
||||
let utc: DateTime<UTC> = UTC::now(); // e.g. `2014-11-28T12:45:59.324310806Z`
|
||||
let local: DateTime<Local> = Local::now(); // e.g. `2014-11-28T21:45:59.324310806+09:00`
|
||||
# let _ = utc; let _ = local;
|
||||
~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Alternatively, you can create your own date and time.
|
||||
This is a bit verbose due to Rust's lack of function and method overloading,
|
||||
but in turn we get a rich combination of initialization methods.
|
||||
|
||||
~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
use chrono::*;
|
||||
|
||||
let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms(9, 10, 11); // `2014-07-08T09:10:11Z`
|
||||
// July 8 is 188th day of the year 2014 (`o` for "ordinal")
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt, UTC.yo(2014, 189).and_hms(9, 10, 11));
|
||||
// July 8 is Tuesday in ISO week 28 of the year 2014.
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt, UTC.isoywd(2014, 28, Weekday::Tue).and_hms(9, 10, 11));
|
||||
|
||||
let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_milli(9, 10, 11, 12); // `2014-07-08T09:10:11.012Z`
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt, UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_micro(9, 10, 11, 12_000));
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt, UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_nano(9, 10, 11, 12_000_000));
|
||||
|
||||
// dynamic verification
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_opt(21, 15, 33),
|
||||
LocalResult::Single(UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms(21, 15, 33)));
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_opt(80, 15, 33), LocalResult::None);
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 7, 38).and_hms_opt(21, 15, 33), LocalResult::None);
|
||||
|
||||
// other time zone objects can be used to construct a local datetime.
|
||||
// obviously, `local_dt` is normally different from `dt`, but `fixed_dt` should be identical.
|
||||
let local_dt = Local.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_milli(9, 10, 11, 12);
|
||||
let fixed_dt = FixedOffset::east(9 * 3600).ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_milli(18, 10, 11, 12);
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt, fixed_dt);
|
||||
# let _ = local_dt;
|
||||
~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Various properties are available to the date and time, and can be altered individually.
|
||||
Most of them are defined in the traits `Datelike` and `Timelike` which you should `use` before.
|
||||
Addition and subtraction is also supported.
|
||||
The following illustrates most supported operations to the date and time:
|
||||
|
||||
~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
use chrono::*;
|
||||
|
||||
# /* we intentionally fake the datetime...
|
||||
// assume this returned `2014-11-28T21:45:59.324310806+09:00`:
|
||||
let dt = Local::now();
|
||||
# */ // up to here. we now define a fixed datetime for the illustrative purpose.
|
||||
# let dt = FixedOffset::east(9*3600).ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms_nano(21, 45, 59, 324310806);
|
||||
|
||||
// property accessors
|
||||
assert_eq!((dt.year(), dt.month(), dt.day()), (2014, 11, 28));
|
||||
assert_eq!((dt.month0(), dt.day0()), (10, 27)); // for unfortunate souls
|
||||
assert_eq!((dt.hour(), dt.minute(), dt.second()), (21, 45, 59));
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.weekday(), Weekday::Fri);
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.weekday().number_from_monday(), 5); // Mon=1, ..., Sat=7
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.ordinal(), 332); // the day of year
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.num_days_from_ce(), 735565); // the number of days from and including Jan 1, 1
|
||||
|
||||
// time zone accessor and manipulation
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.offset().local_minus_utc(), Duration::hours(9));
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.timezone(), FixedOffset::east(9 * 3600));
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.with_timezone(&UTC), UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms_nano(12, 45, 59, 324310806));
|
||||
|
||||
// a sample of property manipulations (validates dynamically)
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.with_day(29).unwrap().weekday(), Weekday::Sat); // 2014-11-29 is Saturday
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.with_day(32), None);
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.with_year(-300).unwrap().num_days_from_ce(), -109606); // November 29, 301 BCE
|
||||
|
||||
// arithmetic operations
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 14).and_hms(8, 9, 10) - UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 14).and_hms(10, 9, 8),
|
||||
Duration::seconds(-2 * 3600 + 2));
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(1970, 1, 1).and_hms(0, 0, 0) + Duration::seconds(1_000_000_000),
|
||||
UTC.ymd(2001, 9, 9).and_hms(1, 46, 40));
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(1970, 1, 1).and_hms(0, 0, 0) - Duration::seconds(1_000_000_000),
|
||||
UTC.ymd(1938, 4, 24).and_hms(22, 13, 20));
|
||||
~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Formatting is done via the `format` method,
|
||||
which format is equivalent to the familiar `strftime` format.
|
||||
(See the `format::strftime` module documentation for full syntax.)
|
||||
|
||||
The default `to_string` method and `{:?}` specifier also give a reasonable representation.
|
||||
Chrono also provides `to_rfc{2822,3339}` methods for well-known formats.
|
||||
|
||||
~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
use chrono::*;
|
||||
|
||||
let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms(12, 0, 9);
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.format("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S").to_string(), "2014-11-28 12:00:09");
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.format("%a %b %e %T %Y").to_string(), "Fri Nov 28 12:00:09 2014");
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.format("%a %b %e %T %Y").to_string(), dt.format("%c").to_string());
|
||||
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.to_string(), "2014-11-28 12:00:09 UTC");
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.to_rfc2822(), "Fri, 28 Nov 2014 12:00:09 +0000");
|
||||
assert_eq!(dt.to_rfc3339(), "2014-11-28T12:00:09+00:00");
|
||||
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", dt), "2014-11-28T12:00:09Z");
|
||||
~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Parsing can be done with three methods:
|
||||
|
||||
1. The standard `FromStr` trait (and `parse` method on a string) can be used for
|
||||
parsing `DateTime<FixedOffset>`, `DateTime<UTC>` and `DateTime<Local>` values.
|
||||
This parses what the `{:?}` (`std::fmt::Debug`) format specifier prints,
|
||||
and requires the offset to be present.
|
||||
|
||||
2. `DateTime::parse_from_str` parses a date and time with offsets and
|
||||
returns `DateTime<FixedOffset>`.
|
||||
This should be used when the offset is a part of input and the caller cannot guess that.
|
||||
It *cannot* be used when the offset can be missing.
|
||||
`DateTime::parse_from_rfc{2822,3339}` are similar but for well-known formats.
|
||||
|
||||
3. `Offset::datetime_from_str` is similar but returns `DateTime` of given offset.
|
||||
When the explicit offset is missing from the input, it simply uses given offset.
|
||||
It issues an error when the input contains an explicit offset different from the current offset.
|
||||
|
||||
More detailed control over the parsing process is available via `format` module.
|
||||
|
||||
~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
use chrono::*;
|
||||
|
||||
let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms(12, 0, 9);
|
||||
let fixed_dt = dt.with_timezone(&FixedOffset::east(9*3600));
|
||||
|
||||
// method 1
|
||||
assert_eq!("2014-11-28T12:00:09Z".parse::<DateTime<UTC>>(), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00".parse::<DateTime<UTC>>(), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00".parse::<DateTime<FixedOffset>>(), Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
|
||||
// method 2
|
||||
assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_str("2014-11-28 21:00:09 +09:00", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z"),
|
||||
Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_rfc2822("Fri, 28 Nov 2014 21:00:09 +0900"), Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_rfc3339("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00"), Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
|
||||
// method 3
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.datetime_from_str("2014-11-28 12:00:09", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Fri Nov 28 12:00:09 2014", "%a %b %e %T %Y"), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
|
||||
// oops, the year is missing!
|
||||
assert!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Fri Nov 28 12:00:09", "%a %b %e %T %Y").is_err());
|
||||
// oops, the format string does not include the year at all!
|
||||
assert!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Fri Nov 28 12:00:09", "%a %b %e %T").is_err());
|
||||
// oops, the weekday is incorrect!
|
||||
assert!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Sat Nov 28 12:00:09 2014", "%a %b %e %T %Y").is_err());
|
||||
~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
### Individual date
|
||||
|
||||
Chrono also provides an individual date type (`Date`).
|
||||
It also has time zones attached, and have to be constructed via time zones.
|
||||
Most operations available to `DateTime` are also available to `Date` whenever appropriate.
|
||||
|
||||
~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
use chrono::*;
|
||||
|
||||
# // these *may* fail, but only very rarely. just rerun the test if you were that unfortunate ;)
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC::today(), UTC::now().date());
|
||||
assert_eq!(Local::today(), Local::now().date());
|
||||
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).weekday(), Weekday::Fri);
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 11, 31), LocalResult::None);
|
||||
assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms_milli(7, 8, 9, 10).format("%H%M%S").to_string(),
|
||||
"070809");
|
||||
~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
There is no timezone-aware `Time` due to the lack of usefulness and also the complexity.
|
||||
|
||||
`DateTime` has `date` method which returns a `Date` which represents its date component.
|
||||
There is also a `time` method, which simply returns a naive local time described below.
|
||||
|
||||
### Naive date and time
|
||||
|
||||
Chrono provides naive counterparts to `Date`, (non-existent) `Time` and `DateTime`
|
||||
as `NaiveDate`, `NaiveTime` and `NaiveDateTime` respectively.
|
||||
|
||||
They have almost equivalent interfaces as their timezone-aware twins,
|
||||
but are not associated to time zones obviously and can be quite low-level.
|
||||
They are mostly useful for building blocks for higher-level types.
|
||||
|
||||
Timezone-aware `DateTime` and `Date` types have two methods returning naive versions:
|
||||
`naive_local` returns a view to the naive local time,
|
||||
and `naive_utc` returns a view to the naive UTC time.
|
||||
|
||||
## Limitations
|
||||
|
||||
Only proleptic Gregorian calendar (i.e. extended to support older dates) is supported.
|
||||
Be very careful if you really have to deal with pre-20C dates, they can be in Julian or others.
|
||||
|
||||
Date types are limited in about +/- 262,000 years from the common epoch.
|
||||
Time types are limited in the nanosecond accuracy.
|
||||
|
||||
Leap seconds are supported in the representation but Chrono doesn't try to make use of them.
|
||||
(The main reason is that leap seconds are not really predictable.)
|
||||
Almost *every* operation over the possible leap seconds will ignore them.
|
||||
Consider using `NaiveDateTime` with the implicit TAI (International Atomic Time) scale if you want.
|
||||
|
||||
Chrono inherently does not support an inaccurate or partial date and time representation.
|
||||
Any operation that can be ambiguous will return `None` in such cases.
|
||||
For example, "a month later" of 2014-01-30 is not well-defined
|
||||
and consequently `UTC.ymd(2014, 1, 30).with_month(2)` returns `None`.
|
||||
|
||||
Advanced time zone handling is not yet supported (but is planned in 0.3).
|
||||
|
||||
*/
|
||||
//! # Chrono 0.2.17
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Date and time handling for Rust. (also known as `rust-chrono`)
|
||||
//! It aims to be a feature-complete superset of
|
||||
//! the [time](https://github.com/rust-lang/time) library.
|
||||
//! In particular,
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! * Chrono strictly adheres to ISO 8601.
|
||||
//! * Chrono is timezone-aware by default, with separate timezone-naive types.
|
||||
//! * Chrono is space-optimal and (while not being the primary goal) reasonably efficient.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! There were several previous attempts to bring a good date and time library to Rust,
|
||||
//! which Chrono builts upon and should acknowledge:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! * [Initial research on
|
||||
//! the wiki](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-wiki-backup/blob/master/Lib-datetime.md)
|
||||
//! * Dietrich Epp's [datetime-rs](https://github.com/depp/datetime-rs)
|
||||
//! * Luis de Bethencourt's [rust-datetime](https://github.com/luisbg/rust-datetime)
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ## Usage
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Put this in your `Cargo.toml`:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ```toml
|
||||
//! [dependencies]
|
||||
//! chrono = "0.2"
|
||||
//! ```
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! And put this in your crate root:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ```rust
|
||||
//! extern crate chrono;
|
||||
//! ```
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ## Overview
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ### Duration
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Chrono used to have a `Duration` type, which represents the time span.
|
||||
//! This is a simple reexport of
|
||||
//! [`time::Duration`](http://doc.rust-lang.org/time/time/struct.Duration.html) type
|
||||
//! provided by crates.io `time` crate (which originally comes from Chrono).
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ### Date and Time
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Chrono provides a `DateTime` type for the combined date and time.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! `DateTime`, among others, is timezone-aware and
|
||||
//! must be constructed from the `TimeZone` object.
|
||||
//! `DateTime`s with different time zones do not mix, but can be converted to each other.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! You can get the current date and time in the UTC time zone (`UTC::now()`)
|
||||
//! or in the local time zone (`Local::now()`).
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
//! use chrono::*;
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! let utc: DateTime<UTC> = UTC::now(); // e.g. `2014-11-28T12:45:59.324310806Z`
|
||||
//! let local: DateTime<Local> = Local::now(); // e.g. `2014-11-28T21:45:59.324310806+09:00`
|
||||
//! # let _ = utc; let _ = local;
|
||||
//! ~~~~
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Alternatively, you can create your own date and time.
|
||||
//! This is a bit verbose due to Rust's lack of function and method overloading,
|
||||
//! but in turn we get a rich combination of initialization methods.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
//! use chrono::*;
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms(9, 10, 11); // `2014-07-08T09:10:11Z`
|
||||
//! // July 8 is 188th day of the year 2014 (`o` for "ordinal")
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt, UTC.yo(2014, 189).and_hms(9, 10, 11));
|
||||
//! // July 8 is Tuesday in ISO week 28 of the year 2014.
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt, UTC.isoywd(2014, 28, Weekday::Tue).and_hms(9, 10, 11));
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_milli(9, 10, 11, 12); // `2014-07-08T09:10:11.012Z`
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt, UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_micro(9, 10, 11, 12_000));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt, UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_nano(9, 10, 11, 12_000_000));
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // dynamic verification
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_opt(21, 15, 33),
|
||||
//! LocalResult::Single(UTC.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms(21, 15, 33)));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_opt(80, 15, 33), LocalResult::None);
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 7, 38).and_hms_opt(21, 15, 33), LocalResult::None);
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // other time zone objects can be used to construct a local datetime.
|
||||
//! // obviously, `local_dt` is normally different from `dt`, but `fixed_dt` should be identical.
|
||||
//! let local_dt = Local.ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_milli(9, 10, 11, 12);
|
||||
//! let fixed_dt = FixedOffset::east(9 * 3600).ymd(2014, 7, 8).and_hms_milli(18, 10, 11, 12);
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt, fixed_dt);
|
||||
//! # let _ = local_dt;
|
||||
//! ~~~~
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Various properties are available to the date and time, and can be altered individually.
|
||||
//! Most of them are defined in the traits `Datelike` and `Timelike` which you should `use` before.
|
||||
//! Addition and subtraction is also supported.
|
||||
//! The following illustrates most supported operations to the date and time:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
//! use chrono::*;
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! # /* we intentionally fake the datetime...
|
||||
//! // assume this returned `2014-11-28T21:45:59.324310806+09:00`:
|
||||
//! let dt = Local::now();
|
||||
//! # */ // up to here. we now define a fixed datetime for the illustrative purpose.
|
||||
//! # let dt = FixedOffset::east(9*3600).ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms_nano(21, 45, 59, 324310806);
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // property accessors
|
||||
//! assert_eq!((dt.year(), dt.month(), dt.day()), (2014, 11, 28));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!((dt.month0(), dt.day0()), (10, 27)); // for unfortunate souls
|
||||
//! assert_eq!((dt.hour(), dt.minute(), dt.second()), (21, 45, 59));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.weekday(), Weekday::Fri);
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.weekday().number_from_monday(), 5); // Mon=1, ..., Sat=7
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.ordinal(), 332); // the day of year
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.num_days_from_ce(), 735565); // the number of days from and including Jan 1, 1
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // time zone accessor and manipulation
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.offset().local_minus_utc(), Duration::hours(9));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.timezone(), FixedOffset::east(9 * 3600));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.with_timezone(&UTC), UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms_nano(12, 45, 59, 324310806));
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // a sample of property manipulations (validates dynamically)
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.with_day(29).unwrap().weekday(), Weekday::Sat); // 2014-11-29 is Saturday
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.with_day(32), None);
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.with_year(-300).unwrap().num_days_from_ce(), -109606); // November 29, 301 BCE
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // arithmetic operations
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 14).and_hms(8, 9, 10) - UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 14).and_hms(10, 9, 8),
|
||||
//! Duration::seconds(-2 * 3600 + 2));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(1970, 1, 1).and_hms(0, 0, 0) + Duration::seconds(1_000_000_000),
|
||||
//! UTC.ymd(2001, 9, 9).and_hms(1, 46, 40));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(1970, 1, 1).and_hms(0, 0, 0) - Duration::seconds(1_000_000_000),
|
||||
//! UTC.ymd(1938, 4, 24).and_hms(22, 13, 20));
|
||||
//! ~~~~
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Formatting is done via the `format` method,
|
||||
//! which format is equivalent to the familiar `strftime` format.
|
||||
//! (See the `format::strftime` module documentation for full syntax.)
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! The default `to_string` method and `{:?}` specifier also give a reasonable representation.
|
||||
//! Chrono also provides `to_rfc{2822,3339}` methods for well-known formats.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
//! use chrono::*;
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms(12, 0, 9);
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.format("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S").to_string(), "2014-11-28 12:00:09");
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.format("%a %b %e %T %Y").to_string(), "Fri Nov 28 12:00:09 2014");
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.format("%a %b %e %T %Y").to_string(), dt.format("%c").to_string());
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.to_string(), "2014-11-28 12:00:09 UTC");
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.to_rfc2822(), "Fri, 28 Nov 2014 12:00:09 +0000");
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(dt.to_rfc3339(), "2014-11-28T12:00:09+00:00");
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", dt), "2014-11-28T12:00:09Z");
|
||||
//! ~~~~
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Parsing can be done with three methods:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! 1. The standard `FromStr` trait (and `parse` method on a string) can be used for
|
||||
//! parsing `DateTime<FixedOffset>`, `DateTime<UTC>` and `DateTime<Local>` values.
|
||||
//! This parses what the `{:?}` (`std::fmt::Debug`) format specifier prints,
|
||||
//! and requires the offset to be present.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! 2. `DateTime::parse_from_str` parses a date and time with offsets and
|
||||
//! returns `DateTime<FixedOffset>`.
|
||||
//! This should be used when the offset is a part of input and the caller cannot guess that.
|
||||
//! It *cannot* be used when the offset can be missing.
|
||||
//! `DateTime::parse_from_rfc{2822,3339}` are similar but for well-known formats.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! 3. `Offset::datetime_from_str` is similar but returns `DateTime` of given offset.
|
||||
//! When the explicit offset is missing from the input, it simply uses given offset.
|
||||
//! It issues an error when the input contains an explicit offset different
|
||||
//! from the current offset.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! More detailed control over the parsing process is available via `format` module.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
//! use chrono::*;
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! let dt = UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms(12, 0, 9);
|
||||
//! let fixed_dt = dt.with_timezone(&FixedOffset::east(9*3600));
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // method 1
|
||||
//! assert_eq!("2014-11-28T12:00:09Z".parse::<DateTime<UTC>>(), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00".parse::<DateTime<UTC>>(), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00".parse::<DateTime<FixedOffset>>(), Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // method 2
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_str("2014-11-28 21:00:09 +09:00", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z"),
|
||||
//! Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_rfc2822("Fri, 28 Nov 2014 21:00:09 +0900"),
|
||||
//! Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(DateTime::parse_from_rfc3339("2014-11-28T21:00:09+09:00"), Ok(fixed_dt.clone()));
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // method 3
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.datetime_from_str("2014-11-28 12:00:09", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Fri Nov 28 12:00:09 2014", "%a %b %e %T %Y"), Ok(dt.clone()));
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! // oops, the year is missing!
|
||||
//! assert!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Fri Nov 28 12:00:09", "%a %b %e %T %Y").is_err());
|
||||
//! // oops, the format string does not include the year at all!
|
||||
//! assert!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Fri Nov 28 12:00:09", "%a %b %e %T").is_err());
|
||||
//! // oops, the weekday is incorrect!
|
||||
//! assert!(UTC.datetime_from_str("Sat Nov 28 12:00:09 2014", "%a %b %e %T %Y").is_err());
|
||||
//! ~~~~
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ### Individual date
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Chrono also provides an individual date type (`Date`).
|
||||
//! It also has time zones attached, and have to be constructed via time zones.
|
||||
//! Most operations available to `DateTime` are also available to `Date` whenever appropriate.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ~~~~ {.rust}
|
||||
//! use chrono::*;
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! # // these *may* fail, but only very rarely. just rerun the test if you were that unfortunate ;)
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC::today(), UTC::now().date());
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(Local::today(), Local::now().date());
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).weekday(), Weekday::Fri);
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd_opt(2014, 11, 31), LocalResult::None);
|
||||
//! assert_eq!(UTC.ymd(2014, 11, 28).and_hms_milli(7, 8, 9, 10).format("%H%M%S").to_string(),
|
||||
//! "070809");
|
||||
//! ~~~~
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! There is no timezone-aware `Time` due to the lack of usefulness and also the complexity.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! `DateTime` has `date` method which returns a `Date` which represents its date component.
|
||||
//! There is also a `time` method, which simply returns a naive local time described below.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ### Naive date and time
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Chrono provides naive counterparts to `Date`, (non-existent) `Time` and `DateTime`
|
||||
//! as `NaiveDate`, `NaiveTime` and `NaiveDateTime` respectively.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! They have almost equivalent interfaces as their timezone-aware twins,
|
||||
//! but are not associated to time zones obviously and can be quite low-level.
|
||||
//! They are mostly useful for building blocks for higher-level types.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Timezone-aware `DateTime` and `Date` types have two methods returning naive versions:
|
||||
//! `naive_local` returns a view to the naive local time,
|
||||
//! and `naive_utc` returns a view to the naive UTC time.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ## Limitations
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Only proleptic Gregorian calendar (i.e. extended to support older dates) is supported.
|
||||
//! Be very careful if you really have to deal with pre-20C dates, they can be in Julian or others.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Date types are limited in about +/- 262,000 years from the common epoch.
|
||||
//! Time types are limited in the nanosecond accuracy.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Leap seconds are supported in the representation but Chrono doesn't try to make use of them.
|
||||
//! (The main reason is that leap seconds are not really predictable.)
|
||||
//! Almost *every* operation over the possible leap seconds will ignore them.
|
||||
//! Consider using `NaiveDateTime` with the implicit TAI (International Atomic Time) scale
|
||||
//! if you want.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Chrono inherently does not support an inaccurate or partial date and time representation.
|
||||
//! Any operation that can be ambiguous will return `None` in such cases.
|
||||
//! For example, "a month later" of 2014-01-30 is not well-defined
|
||||
//! and consequently `UTC.ymd(2014, 1, 30).with_month(2)` returns `None`.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Advanced time zone handling is not yet supported (but is planned in 0.3).
|
||||
|
||||
#![doc(html_root_url = "https://lifthrasiir.github.io/rust-chrono/")]
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -430,7 +430,6 @@ impl Weekday {
|
|||
/// which equals to `Weekday::num_days_from_monday` in this implementation.
|
||||
/// Do not heavily depend on this though; use explicit methods whenever possible.
|
||||
impl num::traits::FromPrimitive for Weekday {
|
||||
|
||||
#[inline]
|
||||
fn from_i64(n: i64) -> Option<Weekday> {
|
||||
match n {
|
||||
|
@ -565,7 +564,9 @@ pub trait Timelike: Sized {
|
|||
fn hour12(&self) -> (bool, u32) {
|
||||
let hour = self.hour();
|
||||
let mut hour12 = hour % 12;
|
||||
if hour12 == 0 { hour12 = 12; }
|
||||
if hour12 == 0 {
|
||||
hour12 = 12;
|
||||
}
|
||||
(hour >= 12, hour12)
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -612,20 +613,20 @@ fn test_readme_doomsday() {
|
|||
|
||||
for y in range_inclusive(naive::date::MIN.year(), naive::date::MAX.year()) {
|
||||
// even months
|
||||
let d4 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 4, 4);
|
||||
let d6 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 6, 6);
|
||||
let d8 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 8, 8);
|
||||
let d10 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 10, 10);
|
||||
let d12 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 12, 12);
|
||||
let d4 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 4, 4);
|
||||
let d6 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 6, 6);
|
||||
let d8 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 8, 8);
|
||||
let d10 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 10, 10);
|
||||
let d12 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 12, 12);
|
||||
|
||||
// nine to five, seven-eleven
|
||||
let d59 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 5, 9);
|
||||
let d95 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 9, 5);
|
||||
let d711 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 7, 11);
|
||||
let d117 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 11, 7);
|
||||
let d59 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 5, 9);
|
||||
let d95 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 9, 5);
|
||||
let d711 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 7, 11);
|
||||
let d117 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 11, 7);
|
||||
|
||||
// "March 0"
|
||||
let d30 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 3, 1).pred();
|
||||
let d30 = NaiveDate::from_ymd(y, 3, 1).pred();
|
||||
|
||||
let weekday = d30.weekday();
|
||||
let other_dates = [d4, d6, d8, d10, d12, d59, d95, d711, d117];
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue