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  • License
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  • Created about 14 years ago
  • Updated almost 2 years ago

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Repository Details

Fast date/time parsing for the control freak.

Timeliness

Description

Date/time parser for Ruby with the following features:

  • Extensible with custom formats and tokens.

  • It’s pretty fast. Up to 60% faster than Time/Date parse method.

  • Control the parser strictness.

  • Control behaviour of ambiguous date formats (US vs European e.g. mm/dd/yy, dd/mm/yy).

  • I18n support (for months), if I18n gem loaded.

  • Fewer WTFs than Time/Date parse method.

  • Has no dependencies.

  • Works with Ruby MRI >= 2.2

Extracted from the validates_timeliness gem, it has been rewritten cleaner and much faster. It’s most suitable for when you need to control the parsing behaviour. It’s faster than the Time/Date class parse methods, so it has general appeal.

Usage

The simplest example is just a straight forward string parse:

Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14') #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08')          #=> Wed Sep 08 00:00:00 1000 2010
Timeliness.parse('12:13:14')            #=> Sat Jan 01 12:13:14 1100 2000

Specify a Type

You can provide a type which will tell the parser that you are only interested in the part of the value for that type.

Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', :date)     #=> Wed Sep 08 00:00:00 1000 2010
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', :time)     #=> Sat Jan 01 12:13:14 1100 2000
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', :datetime) #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010 i.e. the whole string is used

Now let’s get strict. Pass the :strict option with true and things get finicky

Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', :date, strict: true)     #=> nil
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', :time, strict: true)     #=> nil
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', :datetime, strict: true) #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010 i.e. the whole string is used

The date and time strings are not accepted for a datetime type. The strict option without a type is ignored.

Specify the Current Date

Notice a time only string will return with a date value. The date value can be configured globally with this setting:

Timeliness.date_for_time_type = [2010, 1, 1]

or using a lambda thats evaluated when parsed

Timeliness.date_for_time_type = lambda { Time.now }

It can also be specified with :now option:

Timeliness.parse('12:13:14', now: Time.mktime(2010,9,8)) #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010

As well conforming to the Ruby Time class style.

Timeliness.parse('12:13:14', Time.mktime(2010,9,8)) #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010

Timezone

To control what zone the time object is returned in, you have two options. Firstly you can set the default zone. Below is the list of options with their effective time creation method call

Timeliness.default_timezone = :local      # Time.local(...)
Timeliness.default_timezone = :utc        # Time.utc(...)
Timeliness.default_timezone = :current    # Time.zone.local(...). Use current zone.
Timeliness.default_timezone = 'Melbourne' # Time.use_zone('Melbourne') { Time.zone.local(...) }. Doesn't change Time.zone.

The last two options require that you have ActiveSupport timezone extension loaded.

You can also use the :zone option to control it for a single parse call:

Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', zone: :utc)        #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 UTC 2010
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', zone: :local)      #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', zone: :current)    #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010, with Time.zone = 'Melbourne'
Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', zone: 'Melbourne') #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 1000 2010

Remember, you must have ActiveSupport timezone extension loaded to use the last two examples.

Restrict to Format

To get super finicky, you can restrict the parsing to a single format with the :format option

Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14', format: 'yyyy-mm-dd hh:nn:ss')  #=> Wed Sep 08 12:13:14 UTC 2010
Timeliness.parse('08/09/2010 12:13:14', format: 'yyyy-mm-dd hh:nn:ss')  #=> nil

String with Offset or Zone Abbreviations

Sometimes you may want to parse a string with a zone abbreviation (e.g. MST) or the zone offset (e.g. +1000). These values are supported by the parser and will be used when creating the time object. The return value will be in the default timezone or the zone specified with the :zone option.

Timeliness.parse('Wed, 08 Sep 2010 12:13:14 MST') => Thu, 09 Sep 2010 05:13:14 EST 10:00

Timeliness.parse('2010-09-08T12:13:14-06:00')     => Thu, 09 Sep 2010 05:13:14 EST 10:00

To enable zone abbreviations to work you must have loaded ActiveSupport.

The zone abbreviations supported are those defined in the TzInfo gem, used by ActiveSupport. If you find some that are missing you can add more:

Timeliness.timezone_mapping.update(
  'ZZZ' => 'Sleepy Town'
)

Where ‘Sleepy Town’ is a valid zone name supported by ActiveSupport/TzInfo.

Raw Parsed Values

If you would like to get the raw array of values before the time object is created, you can with

Timeliness._parse('2010-09-08 12:13:14.123456 MST') # => [2010, 9, 8, 12, 13, 14, 123456, 'MST']

The last two value are the microseconds, and zone abbreviation or offset. Note: The format for this value is not defined. You can add it yourself, easily.

ActiveSupport Core Extensions

To make it easier to use the parser in Rails or an app using ActiveSupport, you can add/override the methods for to_time, to_date and to_datetime on a string value. These methods will then use the Timeliness parser for converting a string, instead of the default.

You just need to add this line to an initializer or other application file:

require 'timeliness/core_ext'

Formats

The gem has default formats included which can be easily added to using the format syntax. Also formats can be easily removed so that they are no longer considered valid.

Below are the default formats. If you think they are easy to read then you will be happy to know that is exactly the same format syntax you can use to define your own. No complex regular expressions are needed.

Datetime formats

m/d/yy h:nn:ss   OR  d/m/yy hh:nn:ss
m/d/yy h:nn      OR  d/m/yy h:nn
m/d/yy h:nn_ampm OR  d/m/yy h:nn_ampm
yyyy-mm-dd hh:nn:ss
yyyy-mm-dd h:nn
ddd mmm d hh:nn:ss zo yyyy # Ruby time string
yyyy-mm-ddThh:nn:ssZ  # ISO 8601 without zone offset
yyyy-mm-ddThh:nn:sszo # ISO 8601 with zone offset

NOTE: To use non-US date formats see US/Euro Formats section

Date formats

yyyy/mm/dd
yyyy-mm-dd
yyyy.mm.dd
m/d/yy  OR  d/m/yy
m\d\yy  OR  d\m\yy
d-m-yy
dd-mm-yyyy
d.m.yy
d mmm yy

NOTE: To use non-US date formats see US/Euro Formats section

Time formats

hh:nn:ss
hh-nn-ss
h:nn
h.nn
h nn
h-nn
h:nn_ampm
h.nn_ampm
h nn_ampm
h-nn_ampm
h_ampm

NOTE: Any time format without a meridian token (the ‘ampm’ token) is considered in 24 hour time.

Format Tokens

Here is what each format token means:

Format tokens:
     y = year
     m = month
     d = day
     h = hour
     n = minute
     s = second
     u = micro-seconds
  ampm = meridian (am or pm) with or without dots (e.g. am, a.m, or a.m.)
     _ = optional space
    tz = Timezone abbreviation (e.g. UTC, GMT, PST, EST)
    zo = Timezone offset (e.g. +10:00, -08:00, +1000)

Repeating tokens:
     x = 1 or 2 digits for unit (e.g. 'h' means an hour can be '9' or '09')
    xx = 2 digits exactly for unit (e.g. 'hh' means an hour can only be '09')

Special Cases:
    yy = 2 or 4 digit year
  yyyy = exactly 4 digit year
   mmm = month long name (e.g. 'Jul' or 'July')
   ddd = Day name of 3 to 9 letters (e.g. Wed or Wednesday)
     u = microseconds matches 1 to 3 digits

All other characters are considered literal. For the technically minded, these formats are compiled into a single regular expression

To see all defined formats look at the source code.

Settings

US/Euro Formats

The perennial problem for non-US developers or applications not primarily for the US, is the US date format of m/d/yy. This is can be ambiguous with the European format of d/m/yy. By default the gem uses the US formats as this is the Ruby default when it does date interpretation.

To switch to using the European (or Rest of The World) formats use this setting

Timeliness.use_euro_formats

Now ‘01/02/2000’ will be parsed as 1st February 2000, instead of 2nd January 2000.

You can switch back to US formats with

Timeliness.use_us_formats

Thread Safety

The switching of formats is threadsafe (since v0.4.0), however for each new thread the format default will be the gem default, being the US format. To control default for your app and each new thread, use the config

Timeliness.ambiguous_date_format = :euro

Customising Formats

Sometimes you may not want certain formats to be valid. You can remove formats for each type and the parser will then not consider that a valid format. To remove a format

Timeliness.remove_formats(:date, 'm\d\yy')

Adding new formats is also simple

Timeliness.add_formats(:time, "h o'clock")

Now “10 o’clock” will be a valid value.

You can embed regular expressions in the format but no guarantees that it will remain intact. If you avoid the use of any token characters, and regexp dots or backslashes as special characters in the regexp, it may work as expected. For special characters use POSIX character classes for safety. See the ISO 8601 datetime for an example of an embedded regular expression.

Because formats are evaluated in order, adding a format which may be ambiguous with an existing format, will mean your format is ignored. If you need to make your new format higher precedence than an existing format, you can include the before option like so

Timeliness.add_formats(:time, 'ss:nn:hh', before: 'hh:nn:ss')

Now a time of ‘59:30:23’ will be interpreted as 11:30:59 pm. This option saves you adding a new one and deleting an old one to get it to work.

Ambiguous Year

When dealing with 2 digit year values, by default a year is interpreted as being in the last century when at or above 30. You can customize this however

Timeliness.ambiguous_year_threshold = 20

Now you get:

year of 19 is considered 2019
year of 20 is considered 1920

Credits

License

Copyright © 2010 Adam Meehan, released under the MIT license

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