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1543 строки
47 KiB
Ruby
1543 строки
47 KiB
Ruby
#
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# date.rb - date and time library
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#
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# Author: Tadayoshi Funaba 1998-2006
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#
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# Documentation: William Webber <william@williamwebber.com>
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#
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#--
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# $Id: date.rb,v 2.21 2006-08-19 22:38:12+09 tadf Exp $
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#++
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#
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# == Overview
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#
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# This file provides two classes for working with
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# dates and times.
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#
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# The first class, Date, represents dates.
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# It works with years, months, weeks, and days.
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# See the Date class documentation for more details.
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#
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# The second, DateTime, extends Date to include hours,
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# minutes, seconds, and fractions of a second. It
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# provides basic support for time zones. See the
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# DateTime class documentation for more details.
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#
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# === Ways of calculating the date.
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#
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# In common usage, the date is reckoned in years since or
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# before the Common Era (CE/BCE, also known as AD/BC), then
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# as a month and day-of-the-month within the current year.
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# This is known as the *Civil* *Date*, and abbreviated
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# as +civil+ in the Date class.
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#
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# Instead of year, month-of-the-year, and day-of-the-month,
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# the date can also be reckoned in terms of year and
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# day-of-the-year. This is known as the *Ordinal* *Date*,
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# and is abbreviated as +ordinal+ in the Date class. (Note
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# that referring to this as the Julian date is incorrect.)
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#
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# The date can also be reckoned in terms of year, week-of-the-year,
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# and day-of-the-week. This is known as the *Commercial*
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# *Date*, and is abbreviated as +commercial+ in the
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# Date class. The commercial week runs Monday (day-of-the-week
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# 1) to Sunday (day-of-the-week 7), in contrast to the civil
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# week which runs Sunday (day-of-the-week 0) to Saturday
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# (day-of-the-week 6). The first week of the commercial year
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# starts on the Monday on or before January 1, and the commercial
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# year itself starts on this Monday, not January 1.
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#
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# For scientific purposes, it is convenient to refer to a date
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# simply as a day count, counting from an arbitrary initial
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# day. The date first chosen for this was January 1, 4713 BCE.
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# A count of days from this date is the *Julian* *Day* *Number*
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# or *Julian* *Date*, which is abbreviated as +jd+ in the
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# Date class. This is in local time, and counts from midnight
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# on the initial day. The stricter usage is in UTC, and counts
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# from midday on the initial day. This is referred to in the
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# Date class as the *Astronomical* *Julian* *Day* *Number*, and
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# abbreviated as +ajd+. In the Date class, the Astronomical
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# Julian Day Number includes fractional days.
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#
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# Another absolute day count is the *Modified* *Julian* *Day*
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# *Number*, which takes November 17, 1858 as its initial day.
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# This is abbreviated as +mjd+ in the Date class. There
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# is also an *Astronomical* *Modified* *Julian* *Day* *Number*,
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# which is in UTC and includes fractional days. This is
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# abbreviated as +amjd+ in the Date class. Like the Modified
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# Julian Day Number (and unlike the Astronomical Julian
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# Day Number), it counts from midnight.
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#
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# Alternative calendars such as the Chinese Lunar Calendar,
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# the Islamic Calendar, or the French Revolutionary Calendar
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# are not supported by the Date class; nor are calendars that
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# are based on an Era different from the Common Era, such as
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# the Japanese Imperial Calendar or the Republic of China
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# Calendar.
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#
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# === Calendar Reform
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#
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# The standard civil year is 365 days long. However, the
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# solar year is fractionally longer than this. To account
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# for this, a *leap* *year* is occasionally inserted. This
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# is a year with 366 days, the extra day falling on February 29.
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# In the early days of the civil calendar, every fourth
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# year without exception was a leap year. This way of
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# reckoning leap years is the *Julian* *Calendar*.
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#
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# However, the solar year is marginally shorter than 365 1/4
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# days, and so the *Julian* *Calendar* gradually ran slow
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# over the centuries. To correct this, every 100th year
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# (but not every 400th year) was excluded as a leap year.
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# This way of reckoning leap years, which we use today, is
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# the *Gregorian* *Calendar*.
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#
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# The Gregorian Calendar was introduced at different times
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# in different regions. The day on which it was introduced
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# for a particular region is the *Day* *of* *Calendar*
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# *Reform* for that region. This is abbreviated as +sg+
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# (for Start of Gregorian calendar) in the Date class.
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#
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# Two such days are of particular
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# significance. The first is October 15, 1582, which was
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# the Day of Calendar Reform for Italy and most Catholic
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# countries. The second is September 14, 1752, which was
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# the Day of Calendar Reform for England and its colonies
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# (including what is now the United States). These two
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# dates are available as the constants Date::ITALY and
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# Date::ENGLAND, respectively. (By comparison, Germany and
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# Holland, less Catholic than Italy but less stubborn than
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# England, changed over in 1698; Sweden in 1753; Russia not
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# till 1918, after the Revolution; and Greece in 1923. Many
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# Orthodox churches still use the Julian Calendar. A complete
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# list of Days of Calendar Reform can be found at
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# http://www.polysyllabic.com/GregConv.html.)
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#
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# Switching from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar
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# involved skipping a number of days to make up for the
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# accumulated lag, and the later the switch was (or is)
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# done, the more days need to be skipped. So in 1582 in Italy,
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# 4th October was followed by 15th October, skipping 10 days; in 1752
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# in England, 2nd September was followed by 14th September, skipping
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# 11 days; and if I decided to switch from Julian to Gregorian
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# Calendar this midnight, I would go from 27th July 2003 (Julian)
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# today to 10th August 2003 (Gregorian) tomorrow, skipping
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# 13 days. The Date class is aware of this gap, and a supposed
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# date that would fall in the middle of it is regarded as invalid.
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#
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# The Day of Calendar Reform is relevant to all date representations
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# involving years. It is not relevant to the Julian Day Numbers,
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# except for converting between them and year-based representations.
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#
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# In the Date and DateTime classes, the Day of Calendar Reform or
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# +sg+ can be specified a number of ways. First, it can be as
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# the Julian Day Number of the Day of Calendar Reform. Second,
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# it can be using the constants Date::ITALY or Date::ENGLAND; these
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# are in fact the Julian Day Numbers of the Day of Calendar Reform
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# of the respective regions. Third, it can be as the constant
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# Date::JULIAN, which means to always use the Julian Calendar.
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# Finally, it can be as the constant Date::GREGORIAN, which means
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# to always use the Gregorian Calendar.
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#
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# Note: in the Julian Calendar, New Years Day was March 25. The
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# Date class does not follow this convention.
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#
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# === Time Zones
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#
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# DateTime objects support a simple representation
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# of time zones. Time zones are represented as an offset
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# from UTC, as a fraction of a day. This offset is the
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# how much local time is later (or earlier) than UTC.
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# UTC offset 0 is centred on England (also known as GMT).
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# As you travel east, the offset increases until you
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# reach the dateline in the middle of the Pacific Ocean;
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# as you travel west, the offset decreases. This offset
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# is abbreviated as +of+ in the Date class.
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#
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# This simple representation of time zones does not take
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# into account the common practice of Daylight Savings
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# Time or Summer Time.
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#
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# Most DateTime methods return the date and the
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# time in local time. The two exceptions are
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# #ajd() and #amjd(), which return the date and time
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# in UTC time, including fractional days.
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#
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# The Date class does not support time zone offsets, in that
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# there is no way to create a Date object with a time zone.
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# However, methods of the Date class when used by a
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# DateTime instance will use the time zone offset of this
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# instance.
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#
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# == Examples of use
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#
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# === Print out the date of every Sunday between two dates.
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#
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# def print_sundays(d1, d2)
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# d1 +=1 while (d1.wday != 0)
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# d1.step(d2, 7) do |date|
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# puts "#{Date::MONTHNAMES[date.mon]} #{date.day}"
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# end
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# end
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#
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# print_sundays(Date::civil(2003, 4, 8), Date::civil(2003, 5, 23))
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#
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# === Calculate how many seconds to go till midnight on New Year's Day.
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#
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# def secs_to_new_year(now = DateTime::now())
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# new_year = DateTime.new(now.year + 1, 1, 1)
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# dif = new_year - now
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# hours, mins, secs, ignore_fractions = Date::day_fraction_to_time(dif)
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# return hours * 60 * 60 + mins * 60 + secs
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# end
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#
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# puts secs_to_new_year()
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require 'rational'
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require 'date/format'
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# Class representing a date.
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#
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# See the documentation to the file date.rb for an overview.
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#
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# Internally, the date is represented as an Astronomical
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# Julian Day Number, +ajd+. The Day of Calendar Reform, +sg+, is
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# also stored, for conversions to other date formats. (There
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# is also an +of+ field for a time zone offset, but this
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# is only for the use of the DateTime subclass.)
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#
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# A new Date object is created using one of the object creation
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# class methods named after the corresponding date format, and the
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# arguments appropriate to that date format; for instance,
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# Date::civil() (aliased to Date::new()) with year, month,
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# and day-of-month, or Date::ordinal() with year and day-of-year.
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# All of these object creation class methods also take the
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# Day of Calendar Reform as an optional argument.
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#
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# Date objects are immutable once created.
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#
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# Once a Date has been created, date values
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# can be retrieved for the different date formats supported
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# using instance methods. For instance, #mon() gives the
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# Civil month, #cwday() gives the Commercial day of the week,
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# and #yday() gives the Ordinal day of the year. Date values
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# can be retrieved in any format, regardless of what format
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# was used to create the Date instance.
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#
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# The Date class includes the Comparable module, allowing
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# date objects to be compared and sorted, ranges of dates
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# to be created, and so forth.
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class Date
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include Comparable
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# Full month names, in English. Months count from 1 to 12; a
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# month's numerical representation indexed into this array
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# gives the name of that month (hence the first element is nil).
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MONTHNAMES = [nil] + %w(January February March April May June July
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August September October November December)
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# Full names of days of the week, in English. Days of the week
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# count from 0 to 6 (except in the commercial week); a day's numerical
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# representation indexed into this array gives the name of that day.
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DAYNAMES = %w(Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday)
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# Abbreviated month names, in English.
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ABBR_MONTHNAMES = [nil] + %w(Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
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Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec)
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# Abbreviated day names, in English.
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ABBR_DAYNAMES = %w(Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat)
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class Infinity < Numeric # :nodoc:
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include Comparable
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def initialize(d=1) @d = d <=> 0 end
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def d() @d end
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protected :d
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def zero? () false end
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def finite? () false end
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def infinite? () d.nonzero? end
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def nan? () d.zero? end
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def abs() self.class.new end
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def -@ () self.class.new(-d) end
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def +@ () self.class.new(+d) end
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def <=> (other)
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case other
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when Infinity; d <=> other.d
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when Numeric; d
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else
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begin
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l, r = other.coerce(self)
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return l <=> r
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rescue NoMethodError
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end
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end
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nil
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end
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def coerce(other)
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case other
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when Numeric; return -d, d
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else
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super
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end
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end
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end
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# The Julian Day Number of the Day of Calendar Reform for Italy
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# and the Catholic countries.
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ITALY = 2299161 # 1582-10-15
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# The Julian Day Number of the Day of Calendar Reform for England
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# and her Colonies.
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ENGLAND = 2361222 # 1752-09-14
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# A constant used to indicate that a Date should always use the
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# Julian calendar.
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JULIAN = Infinity.new
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# A constant used to indicate that a Date should always use the
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# Gregorian calendar.
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GREGORIAN = -Infinity.new
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# Does a given Julian Day Number fall inside the old-style (Julian)
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# calendar?
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#
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# +jd+ is the Julian Day Number in question. +sg+ may be Date::GREGORIAN,
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# in which case the answer is false; it may be Date::JULIAN, in which case
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# the answer is true; or it may a number representing the Day of
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# Calendar Reform. Date::ENGLAND and Date::ITALY are two possible such
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# days.
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def self.julian? (jd, sg)
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case sg
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when Numeric
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jd < sg
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else
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if $VERBOSE
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warn("#{caller.shift.sub(/:in .*/, '')}: " \
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"warning: do not use non-numerical object as julian day number anymore")
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end
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not sg
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end
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end
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# Does a given Julian Day Number fall inside the new-style (Gregorian)
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# calendar?
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#
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# The reverse of self.os? See the documentation for that method for
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# more details.
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def self.gregorian? (jd, sg) not julian?(jd, sg) end
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def self.fix_style(jd, sg) # :nodoc:
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if julian?(jd, sg)
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then JULIAN
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else GREGORIAN end
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end
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private_class_method :fix_style
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# Convert a Civil Date to a Julian Day Number.
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# +y+, +m+, and +d+ are the year, month, and day of the
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# month. +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
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#
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# Returns the corresponding Julian Day Number.
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def self.civil_to_jd(y, m, d, sg=GREGORIAN)
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if m <= 2
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y -= 1
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m += 12
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end
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a = (y / 100.0).floor
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b = 2 - a + (a / 4.0).floor
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jd = (365.25 * (y + 4716)).floor +
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(30.6001 * (m + 1)).floor +
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d + b - 1524
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if julian?(jd, sg)
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jd -= b
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end
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jd
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end
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# Convert a Julian Day Number to a Civil Date. +jd+ is
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# the Julian Day Number. +sg+ specifies the Day of
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# Calendar Reform.
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#
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# Returns the corresponding [year, month, day_of_month]
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# as a three-element array.
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def self.jd_to_civil(jd, sg=GREGORIAN)
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if julian?(jd, sg)
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a = jd
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else
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x = ((jd - 1867216.25) / 36524.25).floor
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a = jd + 1 + x - (x / 4.0).floor
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end
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b = a + 1524
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c = ((b - 122.1) / 365.25).floor
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d = (365.25 * c).floor
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e = ((b - d) / 30.6001).floor
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dom = b - d - (30.6001 * e).floor
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if e <= 13
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m = e - 1
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y = c - 4716
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else
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m = e - 13
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y = c - 4715
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end
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return y, m, dom
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end
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# Convert an Ordinal Date to a Julian Day Number.
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#
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# +y+ and +d+ are the year and day-of-year to convert.
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# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
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#
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# Returns the corresponding Julian Day Number.
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def self.ordinal_to_jd(y, d, sg=GREGORIAN)
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civil_to_jd(y, 1, d, sg)
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end
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# Convert a Julian Day Number to an Ordinal Date.
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#
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# +jd+ is the Julian Day Number to convert.
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# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
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#
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# Returns the corresponding Ordinal Date as
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# [year, day_of_year]
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def self.jd_to_ordinal(jd, sg=GREGORIAN)
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y = jd_to_civil(jd, sg)[0]
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doy = jd - civil_to_jd(y - 1, 12, 31, fix_style(jd, sg))
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return y, doy
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end
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# Convert a Julian Day Number to a Commercial Date
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#
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# +jd+ is the Julian Day Number to convert.
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# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
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#
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# Returns the corresponding Commercial Date as
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# [commercial_year, week_of_year, day_of_week]
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def self.jd_to_commercial(jd, sg=GREGORIAN)
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ns = fix_style(jd, sg)
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a = jd_to_civil(jd - 3, ns)[0]
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y = if jd >= commercial_to_jd(a + 1, 1, 1, ns) then a + 1 else a end
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w = 1 + ((jd - commercial_to_jd(y, 1, 1, ns)) / 7).floor
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d = (jd + 1) % 7
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if d.zero? then d = 7 end
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return y, w, d
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end
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# Convert a Commercial Date to a Julian Day Number.
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#
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# +y+, +w+, and +d+ are the (commercial) year, week of the year,
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# and day of the week of the Commercial Date to convert.
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# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
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def self.commercial_to_jd(y, w, d, ns=GREGORIAN)
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jd = civil_to_jd(y, 1, 4, ns)
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(jd - (((jd - 1) + 1) % 7)) +
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7 * (w - 1) +
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(d - 1)
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end
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def self.jd_to_weeknum(jd, k=0, sg=GREGORIAN) # :nodoc:
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y, m, d = jd_to_civil(jd, sg)
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a = civil_to_jd(y, 1, 1, sg) + 6
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w, d = clfloor(jd - (a - ((a - k) + 1) % 7) + 7, 7)
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return y, w, d
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end
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def self.weeknum_to_jd(y, w, d, k=0, sg=GREGORIAN) # :nodoc:
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a = civil_to_jd(y, 1, 1, sg) + 6
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(a - ((a - k) + 1) % 7 - 7) + 7 * w + d
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end
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%w(self.clfloor clfloor).each do |name|
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module_eval <<-"end;"
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def #{name}(x, y=1)
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q, r = x.divmod(y)
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q = q.to_i
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return q, r
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end
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end;
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end
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private_class_method :clfloor
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private :clfloor
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# Convert an Astronomical Julian Day Number to a (civil) Julian
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# Day Number.
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#
|
|
# +ajd+ is the Astronomical Julian Day Number to convert.
|
|
# +of+ is the offset from UTC as a fraction of a day (defaults to 0).
|
|
#
|
|
# Returns the (civil) Julian Day Number as [day_number,
|
|
# fraction] where +fraction+ is always 1/2.
|
|
def self.ajd_to_jd(ajd, of=0) clfloor(ajd + of + 1.to_r/2) end
|
|
|
|
# Convert a (civil) Julian Day Number to an Astronomical Julian
|
|
# Day Number.
|
|
#
|
|
# +jd+ is the Julian Day Number to convert, and +fr+ is a
|
|
# fractional day.
|
|
# +of+ is the offset from UTC as a fraction of a day (defaults to 0).
|
|
#
|
|
# Returns the Astronomical Julian Day Number as a single
|
|
# numeric value.
|
|
def self.jd_to_ajd(jd, fr, of=0) jd + fr - of - 1.to_r/2 end
|
|
|
|
# Convert a fractional day +fr+ to [hours, minutes, seconds,
|
|
# fraction_of_a_second]
|
|
def self.day_fraction_to_time(fr)
|
|
h, fr = clfloor(fr, 1.to_r/24)
|
|
min, fr = clfloor(fr, 1.to_r/1440)
|
|
s, fr = clfloor(fr, 1.to_r/86400)
|
|
return h, min, s, fr
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Convert an +h+ hour, +min+ minutes, +s+ seconds period
|
|
# to a fractional day.
|
|
def self.time_to_day_fraction(h, min, s)
|
|
h.to_r/24 + min.to_r/1440 + s.to_r/86400
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Convert an Astronomical Modified Julian Day Number to an
|
|
# Astronomical Julian Day Number.
|
|
def self.amjd_to_ajd(amjd) amjd + 4800001.to_r/2 end
|
|
|
|
# Convert an Astronomical Julian Day Number to an
|
|
# Astronomical Modified Julian Day Number.
|
|
def self.ajd_to_amjd(ajd) ajd - 4800001.to_r/2 end
|
|
|
|
# Convert a Modified Julian Day Number to a Julian
|
|
# Day Number.
|
|
def self.mjd_to_jd(mjd) mjd + 2400001 end
|
|
|
|
# Convert a Julian Day Number to a Modified Julian Day
|
|
# Number.
|
|
def self.jd_to_mjd(jd) jd - 2400001 end
|
|
|
|
# Convert a count of the number of days since the adoption
|
|
# of the Gregorian Calendar (in Italy) to a Julian Day Number.
|
|
def self.ld_to_jd(ld) ld + 2299160 end
|
|
|
|
# Convert a Julian Day Number to the number of days since
|
|
# the adoption of the Gregorian Calendar (in Italy).
|
|
def self.jd_to_ld(jd) jd - 2299160 end
|
|
|
|
# Convert a Julian Day Number to the day of the week.
|
|
#
|
|
# Sunday is day-of-week 0; Saturday is day-of-week 6.
|
|
def self.jd_to_wday(jd) (jd + 1) % 7 end
|
|
|
|
# Is a year a leap year in the Julian calendar?
|
|
#
|
|
# All years divisible by 4 are leap years in the Julian calendar.
|
|
def self.julian_leap? (y) y % 4 == 0 end
|
|
|
|
# Is a year a leap year in the Gregorian calendar?
|
|
#
|
|
# All years divisible by 4 are leap years in the Gregorian calendar,
|
|
# except for years divisible by 100 and not by 400.
|
|
def self.gregorian_leap? (y) y % 4 == 0 and y % 100 != 0 or y % 400 == 0 end
|
|
|
|
class << self; alias_method :leap?, :gregorian_leap? end
|
|
class << self; alias_method :new0, :new end
|
|
|
|
# Is +jd+ a valid Julian Day Number?
|
|
#
|
|
# If it is, returns it. In fact, any value is treated as a valid
|
|
# Julian Day Number.
|
|
def self.valid_jd? (jd, sg=ITALY) jd end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new Date object from a Julian Day Number.
|
|
#
|
|
# +jd+ is the Julian Day Number; if not specified, it defaults to
|
|
# 0.
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.jd(jd=0, sg=ITALY)
|
|
jd = valid_jd?(jd, sg)
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), 0, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Do the year +y+ and day-of-year +d+ make a valid Ordinal Date?
|
|
# Returns the corresponding Julian Day Number if they do, or
|
|
# nil if they don't.
|
|
#
|
|
# +d+ can be a negative number, in which case it counts backwards
|
|
# from the end of the year (-1 being the last day of the year).
|
|
# No year wraparound is performed, however, so valid values of
|
|
# +d+ are -365 .. -1, 1 .. 365 on a non-leap-year,
|
|
# -366 .. -1, 1 .. 366 on a leap year.
|
|
# A date falling in the period skipped in the Day of Calendar Reform
|
|
# adjustment is not valid.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.valid_ordinal? (y, d, sg=ITALY)
|
|
if d < 0
|
|
ny, = clfloor(y + 1, 1)
|
|
jd = ordinal_to_jd(ny, d + 1, sg)
|
|
ns = fix_style(jd, sg)
|
|
return unless [y] == jd_to_ordinal(jd, sg)[0..0]
|
|
return unless [ny, 1] == jd_to_ordinal(jd - d, ns)
|
|
else
|
|
jd = ordinal_to_jd(y, d, sg)
|
|
return unless [y, d] == jd_to_ordinal(jd, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
jd
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new Date object from an Ordinal Date, specified
|
|
# by year +y+ and day-of-year +d+. +d+ can be negative,
|
|
# in which it counts backwards from the end of the year.
|
|
# No year wraparound is performed, however. An invalid
|
|
# value for +d+ results in an ArgumentError being raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# +y+ defaults to -4712, and +d+ to 1; this is Julian Day
|
|
# Number day 0.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.ordinal(y=-4712, d=1, sg=ITALY)
|
|
unless jd = valid_ordinal?(y, d, sg)
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), 0, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Do year +y+, month +m+, and day-of-month +d+ make a
|
|
# valid Civil Date? Returns the corresponding Julian
|
|
# Day Number if they do, nil if they don't.
|
|
#
|
|
# +m+ and +d+ can be negative, in which case they count
|
|
# backwards from the end of the year and the end of the
|
|
# month respectively. No wraparound is performed, however,
|
|
# and invalid values cause an ArgumentError to be raised.
|
|
# A date falling in the period skipped in the Day of Calendar
|
|
# Reform adjustment is not valid.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.valid_civil? (y, m, d, sg=ITALY)
|
|
if m < 0
|
|
m += 13
|
|
end
|
|
if d < 0
|
|
ny, nm = clfloor(y * 12 + m, 12)
|
|
nm, = clfloor(nm + 1, 1)
|
|
jd = civil_to_jd(ny, nm, d + 1, sg)
|
|
ns = fix_style(jd, sg)
|
|
return unless [y, m] == jd_to_civil(jd, sg)[0..1]
|
|
return unless [ny, nm, 1] == jd_to_civil(jd - d, ns)
|
|
else
|
|
jd = civil_to_jd(y, m, d, sg)
|
|
return unless [y, m, d] == jd_to_civil(jd, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
jd
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class << self; alias_method :valid_date?, :valid_civil? end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new Date object for the Civil Date specified by
|
|
# year +y+, month +m+, and day-of-month +d+.
|
|
#
|
|
# +m+ and +d+ can be negative, in which case they count
|
|
# backwards from the end of the year and the end of the
|
|
# month respectively. No wraparound is performed, however,
|
|
# and invalid values cause an ArgumentError to be raised.
|
|
# can be negative
|
|
#
|
|
# +y+ defaults to -4712, +m+ to 1, and +d+ to 1; this is
|
|
# Julian Day Number day 0.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.civil(y=-4712, m=1, d=1, sg=ITALY)
|
|
unless jd = valid_civil?(y, m, d, sg)
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), 0, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class << self; alias_method :new, :civil end
|
|
|
|
# Do year +y+, week-of-year +w+, and day-of-week +d+ make a
|
|
# valid Commercial Date? Returns the corresponding Julian
|
|
# Day Number if they do, nil if they don't.
|
|
#
|
|
# Monday is day-of-week 1; Sunday is day-of-week 7.
|
|
#
|
|
# +w+ and +d+ can be negative, in which case they count
|
|
# backwards from the end of the year and the end of the
|
|
# week respectively. No wraparound is performed, however,
|
|
# and invalid values cause an ArgumentError to be raised.
|
|
# A date falling in the period skipped in the Day of Calendar
|
|
# Reform adjustment is not valid.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.valid_commercial? (y, w, d, sg=ITALY)
|
|
if d < 0
|
|
d += 8
|
|
end
|
|
if w < 0
|
|
w = jd_to_commercial(commercial_to_jd(y + 1, 1, 1) + w * 7)[1]
|
|
end
|
|
jd = commercial_to_jd(y, w, d)
|
|
return unless gregorian?(jd, sg)
|
|
return unless [y, w, d] == jd_to_commercial(jd)
|
|
jd
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new Date object for the Commercial Date specified by
|
|
# year +y+, week-of-year +w+, and day-of-week +d+.
|
|
#
|
|
# Monday is day-of-week 1; Sunday is day-of-week 7.
|
|
#
|
|
# +w+ and +d+ can be negative, in which case they count
|
|
# backwards from the end of the year and the end of the
|
|
# week respectively. No wraparound is performed, however,
|
|
# and invalid values cause an ArgumentError to be raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# +y+ defaults to 1582, +w+ to 41, and +d+ to 5, the Day of
|
|
# Calendar Reform for Italy and the Catholic countries.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.commercial(y=1582, w=41, d=5, sg=ITALY)
|
|
unless jd = valid_commercial?(y, w, d, sg)
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), 0, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def self.valid_weeknum? (y, w, d, k, sg=ITALY) # :nodoc:
|
|
if d < 0
|
|
d += 7
|
|
end
|
|
if w < 0
|
|
w = jd_to_weeknum(weeknum_to_jd(y + 1, 1, k, k) + w * 7, k)[1]
|
|
end
|
|
jd = weeknum_to_jd(y, w, d, k)
|
|
return unless [y, w, d] == jd_to_weeknum(jd, k)
|
|
jd
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
private_class_method :valid_weeknum?
|
|
|
|
def self.rewrite_hash(elem) # :nodoc:
|
|
elem ||= {}
|
|
if seconds = elem[:seconds]
|
|
d, fr = clfloor(seconds, 86400)
|
|
h, fr = clfloor(fr, 3600)
|
|
min, fr = clfloor(fr, 60)
|
|
s, fr = clfloor(fr, 1)
|
|
elem[:jd] = civil_to_jd(1970, 1, 1) + d
|
|
elem[:hour] = h
|
|
elem[:min] = min
|
|
elem[:sec] = s
|
|
elem.delete(:seconds)
|
|
elem.delete(:offset)
|
|
end
|
|
elem
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def self.valid_date_with_hash?(elem, sg) # :nodoc:
|
|
catch :jd do
|
|
a = elem.values_at(:jd)
|
|
if a.all?
|
|
if jd = valid_jd?(*(a << sg))
|
|
throw :jd, jd
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
a = elem.values_at(:year, :yday)
|
|
if a.all?
|
|
if jd = valid_ordinal?(*(a << sg))
|
|
throw :jd, jd
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
a = elem.values_at(:year, :mon, :mday)
|
|
if a.all?
|
|
if jd = valid_civil?(*(a << sg))
|
|
throw :jd, jd
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
a = elem.values_at(:cwyear, :cweek, :cwday)
|
|
if a[2].nil? && elem[:wday]
|
|
a[2] = elem[:wday].nonzero? || 7
|
|
end
|
|
if a.all?
|
|
if jd = valid_commercial?(*(a << sg))
|
|
throw :jd, jd
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
a = elem.values_at(:year, :wnum0, :wday)
|
|
if a[2].nil? && elem[:cwday]
|
|
a[2] = elem[:cwday] % 7
|
|
end
|
|
if a.all?
|
|
if jd = valid_weeknum?(*(a << 0 << sg))
|
|
throw :jd, jd
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
a = elem.values_at(:year, :wnum1, :wday)
|
|
if a[2]
|
|
a[2] = (a[2] - 1) % 7
|
|
end
|
|
if a[2].nil? && elem[:cwday]
|
|
a[2] = (elem[:cwday] - 1) % 7
|
|
end
|
|
if a.all?
|
|
if jd = valid_weeknum?(*(a << 1 << sg))
|
|
throw :jd, jd
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def self.new_with_hash(elem, sg) # :nodoc:
|
|
elem = rewrite_hash(elem)
|
|
unless jd = valid_date_with_hash?(elem, sg)
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), 0, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
private_class_method :rewrite_hash, :valid_date_with_hash?, :new_with_hash
|
|
|
|
# Create a new Date object by parsing from a String
|
|
# according to a specified format.
|
|
#
|
|
# +str+ is a String holding a date representation.
|
|
# +fmt+ is the format that the date is in. See
|
|
# date/format.rb for details on supported formats.
|
|
#
|
|
# The default +str+ is '-4712-01-01', and the default
|
|
# +fmt+ is '%F', which means Year-Month-Day_of_Month.
|
|
# This gives Julian Day Number day 0.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
#
|
|
# An ArgumentError will be raised if +str+ cannot be
|
|
# parsed.
|
|
def self.strptime(str='-4712-01-01', fmt='%F', sg=ITALY)
|
|
elem = _strptime(str, fmt)
|
|
new_with_hash(elem, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new Date object by parsing from a String,
|
|
# without specifying the format.
|
|
#
|
|
# +str+ is a String holding a date representation.
|
|
# +comp+ specifies whether to interpret 2-digit years
|
|
# as 19XX (>= 69) or 20XX (< 69); the default is not to.
|
|
# The method will attempt to parse a date from the String
|
|
# using various heuristics; see #_parse in date/format.rb
|
|
# for more details. If parsing fails, an ArgumentError
|
|
# will be raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# The default +str+ is '-4712-01-01'; this is Julian
|
|
# Day Number day 0.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.parse(str='-4712-01-01', comp=false, sg=ITALY)
|
|
elem = _parse(str, comp)
|
|
new_with_hash(elem, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class << self
|
|
|
|
def once(*ids) # :nodoc:
|
|
for id in ids
|
|
module_eval <<-"end;"
|
|
alias_method :__#{id.to_i}__, :#{id.to_s}
|
|
private :__#{id.to_i}__
|
|
def #{id.to_s}(*args, &block)
|
|
(@__#{id.to_i}__ ||= [__#{id.to_i}__(*args, &block)])[0]
|
|
end
|
|
end;
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
private :once
|
|
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# *NOTE* this is the documentation for the method new0(). If
|
|
# you are reading this as the documentation for new(), that is
|
|
# because rdoc doesn't fully support the aliasing of the
|
|
# initialize() method.
|
|
# new() is in
|
|
# fact an alias for #civil(): read the documentation for that
|
|
# method instead.
|
|
#
|
|
# Create a new Date object.
|
|
#
|
|
# +ajd+ is the Astronomical Julian Day Number.
|
|
# +of+ is the offset from UTC as a fraction of a day.
|
|
# Both default to 0.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform to use for this
|
|
# Date object.
|
|
#
|
|
# Using one of the factory methods such as Date::civil is
|
|
# generally easier and safer.
|
|
def initialize(ajd=0, of=0, sg=ITALY) @ajd, @of, @sg = ajd, of, sg end
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as an Astronomical Julian Day Number.
|
|
def ajd() @ajd end
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as an Astronomical Modified Julian Day Number.
|
|
def amjd() self.class.ajd_to_amjd(@ajd) end
|
|
|
|
once :amjd
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as a Julian Day Number.
|
|
def jd() self.class.ajd_to_jd(@ajd, @of)[0] end
|
|
|
|
# Get any fractional day part of the date.
|
|
def day_fraction() self.class.ajd_to_jd(@ajd, @of)[1] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as a Modified Julian Day Number.
|
|
def mjd() self.class.jd_to_mjd(jd) end
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as the number of days since the Day of Calendar
|
|
# Reform (in Italy and the Catholic countries).
|
|
def ld() self.class.jd_to_ld(jd) end
|
|
|
|
once :jd, :day_fraction, :mjd, :ld
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as a Civil Date, [year, month, day_of_month]
|
|
def civil() self.class.jd_to_civil(jd, @sg) end # :nodoc:
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as an Ordinal Date, [year, day_of_year]
|
|
def ordinal() self.class.jd_to_ordinal(jd, @sg) end # :nodoc:
|
|
|
|
# Get the date as a Commercial Date, [year, week_of_year, day_of_week]
|
|
def commercial() self.class.jd_to_commercial(jd, @sg) end # :nodoc:
|
|
|
|
once :civil, :ordinal, :commercial
|
|
private :civil, :ordinal, :commercial
|
|
|
|
# Get the year of this date.
|
|
def year() civil[0] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the day-of-the-year of this date.
|
|
#
|
|
# January 1 is day-of-the-year 1
|
|
def yday() ordinal[1] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the month of this date.
|
|
#
|
|
# January is month 1.
|
|
def mon() civil[1] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the day-of-the-month of this date.
|
|
def mday() civil[2] end
|
|
|
|
alias_method :month, :mon
|
|
alias_method :day, :mday
|
|
|
|
# Get the time of this date as [hours, minutes, seconds,
|
|
# fraction_of_a_second]
|
|
def time() self.class.day_fraction_to_time(day_fraction) end # :nodoc:
|
|
|
|
once :time
|
|
private :time
|
|
|
|
# Get the hour of this date.
|
|
def hour() time[0] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the minute of this date.
|
|
def min() time[1] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the second of this date.
|
|
def sec() time[2] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the fraction-of-a-second of this date.
|
|
def sec_fraction() time[3] end
|
|
|
|
private :hour, :min, :sec, :sec_fraction
|
|
|
|
def zone() strftime('%:z') end
|
|
|
|
private :zone
|
|
|
|
# Get the commercial year of this date. See *Commercial* *Date*
|
|
# in the introduction for how this differs from the normal year.
|
|
def cwyear() commercial[0] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the commercial week of the year of this date.
|
|
def cweek() commercial[1] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the commercial day of the week of this date. Monday is
|
|
# commercial day-of-week 1; Sunday is commercial day-of-week 7.
|
|
def cwday() commercial[2] end
|
|
|
|
# Get the week day of this date. Sunday is day-of-week 0;
|
|
# Saturday is day-of-week 6.
|
|
def wday() self.class.jd_to_wday(jd) end
|
|
|
|
once :wday
|
|
|
|
DAYNAMES.each_with_index do |n, i|
|
|
define_method(n.downcase + '?'){wday == i}
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Is the current date old-style (Julian Calendar)?
|
|
def julian? () self.class.julian?(jd, @sg) end
|
|
|
|
# Is the current date new-style (Gregorian Calendar)?
|
|
def gregorian? () self.class.gregorian?(jd, @sg) end
|
|
|
|
once :julian?, :gregorian?
|
|
|
|
def fix_style # :nodoc:
|
|
if julian?
|
|
then Date::JULIAN
|
|
else Date::GREGORIAN end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
private :fix_style
|
|
|
|
# Is this a leap year?
|
|
def leap?
|
|
self.class.jd_to_civil(self.class.civil_to_jd(year, 3, 1, fix_style) - 1,
|
|
fix_style)[-1] == 29
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
once :leap?
|
|
|
|
# When is the Day of Calendar Reform for this Date object?
|
|
def start() @sg end
|
|
|
|
# Create a copy of this Date object using a new Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def new_start(sg=self.class::ITALY) self.class.new0(@ajd, @of, sg) end
|
|
|
|
# Create a copy of this Date object that uses the Italian/Catholic
|
|
# Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def italy() new_start(self.class::ITALY) end
|
|
|
|
# Create a copy of this Date object that uses the English/Colonial
|
|
# Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def england() new_start(self.class::ENGLAND) end
|
|
|
|
# Create a copy of this Date object that always uses the Julian
|
|
# Calendar.
|
|
def julian() new_start(self.class::JULIAN) end
|
|
|
|
# Create a copy of this Date object that always uses the Gregorian
|
|
# Calendar.
|
|
def gregorian() new_start(self.class::GREGORIAN) end
|
|
|
|
def offset() @of end
|
|
def new_offset(of=0) self.class.new0(@ajd, of, @sg) end
|
|
|
|
private :offset, :new_offset
|
|
|
|
# Return a new Date object that is +n+ days later than the
|
|
# current one.
|
|
#
|
|
# +n+ may be a negative value, in which case the new Date
|
|
# is earlier than the current one; however, #-() might be
|
|
# more intuitive.
|
|
#
|
|
# If +n+ is not a Numeric, a TypeError will be thrown. In
|
|
# particular, two Dates cannot be added to each other.
|
|
def + (n)
|
|
case n
|
|
when Numeric; return self.class.new0(@ajd + n, @of, @sg)
|
|
end
|
|
raise TypeError, 'expected numeric'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# If +x+ is a Numeric value, create a new Date object that is
|
|
# +x+ days earlier than the current one.
|
|
#
|
|
# If +x+ is a Date, return the number of days between the
|
|
# two dates; or, more precisely, how many days later the current
|
|
# date is than +x+.
|
|
#
|
|
# If +x+ is neither Numeric nor a Date, a TypeError is raised.
|
|
def - (x)
|
|
case x
|
|
when Numeric; return self.class.new0(@ajd - x, @of, @sg)
|
|
when Date; return @ajd - x.ajd
|
|
end
|
|
raise TypeError, 'expected numeric or date'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Compare this date with another date.
|
|
#
|
|
# +other+ can also be a Numeric value, in which case it is
|
|
# interpreted as an Astronomical Julian Day Number.
|
|
#
|
|
# Comparison is by Astronomical Julian Day Number, including
|
|
# fractional days. This means that both the time and the
|
|
# timezone offset are taken into account when comparing
|
|
# two DateTime instances. When comparing a DateTime instance
|
|
# with a Date instance, the time of the latter will be
|
|
# considered as falling on midnight UTC.
|
|
def <=> (other)
|
|
case other
|
|
when Numeric; return @ajd <=> other
|
|
when Date; return @ajd <=> other.ajd
|
|
end
|
|
nil
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# The relationship operator for Date.
|
|
#
|
|
# Compares dates by Julian Day Number. When comparing
|
|
# two DateTime instances, or a DateTime with a Date,
|
|
# the instances will be regarded as equivalent if they
|
|
# fall on the same date in local time.
|
|
def === (other)
|
|
case other
|
|
when Numeric; return jd == other
|
|
when Date; return jd == other.jd
|
|
end
|
|
false
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def next_day(n=1) self + n end
|
|
def prev_day(n=1) self - n end
|
|
|
|
# Return a new Date one day after this one.
|
|
def next() next_day end
|
|
|
|
alias_method :succ, :next
|
|
|
|
# Return a new Date object that is +n+ months later than
|
|
# the current one.
|
|
#
|
|
# If the day-of-the-month of the current Date is greater
|
|
# than the last day of the target month, the day-of-the-month
|
|
# of the returned Date will be the last day of the target month.
|
|
def >> (n)
|
|
y, m = clfloor(year * 12 + (mon - 1) + n, 12)
|
|
m, = clfloor(m + 1, 1)
|
|
d = mday
|
|
d -= 1 until jd2 = self.class.valid_civil?(y, m, d, fix_style)
|
|
self + (jd2 - jd)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Return a new Date object that is +n+ months earlier than
|
|
# the current one.
|
|
#
|
|
# If the day-of-the-month of the current Date is greater
|
|
# than the last day of the target month, the day-of-the-month
|
|
# of the returned Date will be the last day of the target month.
|
|
def << (n) self >> -n end
|
|
|
|
def next_month(n=1) self >> n end
|
|
def prev_month(n=1) self << n end
|
|
|
|
def next_year(n=1) self >> n * 12 end
|
|
def prev_year(n=1) self << n * 12 end
|
|
|
|
# Step the current date forward +step+ days at a
|
|
# time (or backward, if +step+ is negative) until
|
|
# we reach +limit+ (inclusive), yielding the resultant
|
|
# date at each step.
|
|
def step(limit, step=1) # :yield: date
|
|
da = self
|
|
op = [:-,:<=,:>=][step<=>0]
|
|
while da.__send__(op, limit)
|
|
yield da
|
|
da += step
|
|
end
|
|
self
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Step forward one day at a time until we reach +max+
|
|
# (inclusive), yielding each date as we go.
|
|
def upto(max, &block) # :yield: date
|
|
step(max, +1, &block)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Step backward one day at a time until we reach +min+
|
|
# (inclusive), yielding each date as we go.
|
|
def downto(min, &block) # :yield: date
|
|
step(min, -1, &block)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Is this Date equal to +other+?
|
|
#
|
|
# +other+ must both be a Date object, and represent the same date.
|
|
def eql? (other) Date === other and self == other end
|
|
|
|
# Calculate a hash value for this date.
|
|
def hash() @ajd.hash end
|
|
|
|
# Return internal object state as a programmer-readable string.
|
|
def inspect() format('#<%s: %s,%s,%s>', self.class, @ajd, @of, @sg) end
|
|
|
|
# Return the date as a human-readable string.
|
|
#
|
|
# The format used is YYYY-MM-DD.
|
|
def to_s() strftime end
|
|
|
|
# Dump to Marshal format.
|
|
def _dump(limit) Marshal.dump([@ajd, @of, @sg], -1) end
|
|
|
|
# def self._load(str) new0(*Marshal.load(str)) end
|
|
|
|
# Load from Marshall format.
|
|
def self._load(str)
|
|
a = Marshal.load(str)
|
|
if a.size == 2
|
|
ajd, sg = a
|
|
of = 0
|
|
ajd -= 1.to_r/2
|
|
else
|
|
ajd, of, sg = a
|
|
end
|
|
new0(ajd, of, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Class representing a date and time.
|
|
#
|
|
# See the documentation to the file date.rb for an overview.
|
|
#
|
|
# DateTime objects are immutable once created.
|
|
#
|
|
# == Other methods.
|
|
#
|
|
# The following methods are defined in Date, but declared private
|
|
# there. They are made public in DateTime. They are documented
|
|
# here.
|
|
#
|
|
# === hour()
|
|
#
|
|
# Get the hour-of-the-day of the time. This is given
|
|
# using the 24-hour clock, counting from midnight. The first
|
|
# hour after midnight is hour 0; the last hour of the day is
|
|
# hour 23.
|
|
#
|
|
# === min()
|
|
#
|
|
# Get the minute-of-the-hour of the time.
|
|
#
|
|
# === sec()
|
|
#
|
|
# Get the second-of-the-minute of the time.
|
|
#
|
|
# === sec_fraction()
|
|
#
|
|
# Get the fraction of a second of the time. This is returned as
|
|
# a +Rational+.
|
|
#
|
|
# === zone()
|
|
#
|
|
# Get the time zone as a String. This is representation of the
|
|
# time offset such as "+1000", not the true time-zone name.
|
|
#
|
|
# === offset()
|
|
#
|
|
# Get the time zone offset as a fraction of a day. This is returned
|
|
# as a +Rational+.
|
|
#
|
|
# === new_offset(of=0)
|
|
#
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object, identical to the current one, except
|
|
# with a new time zone offset of +of+. +of+ is the new offset from
|
|
# UTC as a fraction of a day.
|
|
#
|
|
class DateTime < Date
|
|
|
|
# Do hour +h+, minute +min+, and second +s+ constitute a valid time?
|
|
#
|
|
# If they do, returns their value as a fraction of a day. If not,
|
|
# returns nil.
|
|
#
|
|
# The 24-hour clock is used. Negative values of +h+, +min+, and
|
|
# +sec+ are treating as counting backwards from the end of the
|
|
# next larger unit (e.g. a +min+ of -2 is treated as 58). No
|
|
# wraparound is performed.
|
|
def self.valid_time? (h, min, s)
|
|
h += 24 if h < 0
|
|
min += 60 if min < 0
|
|
s += 60 if s < 0
|
|
return unless (0..24) === h and
|
|
(0..59) === min and
|
|
(0..59) === s
|
|
time_to_day_fraction(h, min, s)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def self.valid_time_with_hash? (elem) # :nodoc:
|
|
h, min, s = elem.values_at(:hour, :min, :sec)
|
|
h ||= 0
|
|
min ||= 0
|
|
s ||= 0
|
|
s = [s, 59].min
|
|
valid_time?(h, min, s)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object corresponding to the specified
|
|
# Julian Day Number +jd+ and hour +h+, minute +min+, second +s+.
|
|
#
|
|
# The 24-hour clock is used. Negative values of +h+, +min+, and
|
|
# +sec+ are treating as counting backwards from the end of the
|
|
# next larger unit (e.g. a +min+ of -2 is treated as 58). No
|
|
# wraparound is performed. If an invalid time portion is specified,
|
|
# an ArgumentError is raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# +of+ is the offset from UTC as a fraction of a day (defaults to 0).
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
#
|
|
# All day/time values default to 0.
|
|
def self.jd(jd=0, h=0, min=0, s=0, of=0, sg=ITALY)
|
|
unless (jd = valid_jd?(jd, sg)) and
|
|
(fr = valid_time?(h, min, s))
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, fr, of), of, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object corresponding to the specified
|
|
# Ordinal Date and hour +h+, minute +min+, second +s+.
|
|
#
|
|
# The 24-hour clock is used. Negative values of +h+, +min+, and
|
|
# +sec+ are treating as counting backwards from the end of the
|
|
# next larger unit (e.g. a +min+ of -2 is treated as 58). No
|
|
# wraparound is performed. If an invalid time portion is specified,
|
|
# an ArgumentError is raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# +of+ is the offset from UTC as a fraction of a day (defaults to 0).
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
#
|
|
# +y+ defaults to -4712, and +d+ to 1; this is Julian Day Number
|
|
# day 0. The time values default to 0.
|
|
def self.ordinal(y=-4712, d=1, h=0, min=0, s=0, of=0, sg=ITALY)
|
|
unless (jd = valid_ordinal?(y, d, sg)) and
|
|
(fr = valid_time?(h, min, s))
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, fr, of), of, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object corresponding to the specified
|
|
# Civil Date and hour +h+, minute +min+, second +s+.
|
|
#
|
|
# The 24-hour clock is used. Negative values of +h+, +min+, and
|
|
# +sec+ are treating as counting backwards from the end of the
|
|
# next larger unit (e.g. a +min+ of -2 is treated as 58). No
|
|
# wraparound is performed. If an invalid time portion is specified,
|
|
# an ArgumentError is raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# +of+ is the offset from UTC as a fraction of a day (defaults to 0).
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
#
|
|
# +y+ defaults to -4712, +m+ to 1, and +d+ to 1; this is Julian Day
|
|
# Number day 0. The time values default to 0.
|
|
def self.civil(y=-4712, m=1, d=1, h=0, min=0, s=0, of=0, sg=ITALY)
|
|
unless (jd = valid_civil?(y, m, d, sg)) and
|
|
(fr = valid_time?(h, min, s))
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, fr, of), of, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class << self; alias_method :new, :civil end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object corresponding to the specified
|
|
# Commercial Date and hour +h+, minute +min+, second +s+.
|
|
#
|
|
# The 24-hour clock is used. Negative values of +h+, +min+, and
|
|
# +sec+ are treating as counting backwards from the end of the
|
|
# next larger unit (e.g. a +min+ of -2 is treated as 58). No
|
|
# wraparound is performed. If an invalid time portion is specified,
|
|
# an ArgumentError is raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# +of+ is the offset from UTC as a fraction of a day (defaults to 0).
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
#
|
|
# +y+ defaults to 1582, +w+ to 41, and +d+ to 5; this is the Day of
|
|
# Calendar Reform for Italy and the Catholic countries.
|
|
# The time values default to 0.
|
|
def self.commercial(y=1582, w=41, d=5, h=0, min=0, s=0, of=0, sg=ITALY)
|
|
unless (jd = valid_commercial?(y, w, d, sg)) and
|
|
(fr = valid_time?(h, min, s))
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, fr, of), of, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def self.new_with_hash(elem, sg) # :nodoc:
|
|
elem = rewrite_hash(elem)
|
|
unless (jd = valid_date_with_hash?(elem, sg)) and
|
|
(fr = valid_time_with_hash?(elem))
|
|
raise ArgumentError, 'invalid date'
|
|
end
|
|
sf = (elem[:sec_fraction] || 0)
|
|
fr += sf/86400
|
|
of = (elem[:offset] || 0)
|
|
of = of.to_r/86400
|
|
new0(jd_to_ajd(jd, fr, of), of, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
private_class_method :new_with_hash
|
|
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object by parsing from a String
|
|
# according to a specified format.
|
|
#
|
|
# +str+ is a String holding a date-time representation.
|
|
# +fmt+ is the format that the date-time is in. See
|
|
# date/format.rb for details on supported formats.
|
|
#
|
|
# The default +str+ is '-4712-01-01T00:00:00Z', and the default
|
|
# +fmt+ is '%FT%T%Z'. This gives midnight on Julian Day Number day 0.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
#
|
|
# An ArgumentError will be raised if +str+ cannot be
|
|
# parsed.
|
|
def self.strptime(str='-4712-01-01T00:00:00Z', fmt='%FT%T%Z', sg=ITALY)
|
|
elem = _strptime(str, fmt)
|
|
new_with_hash(elem, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object by parsing from a String,
|
|
# without specifying the format.
|
|
#
|
|
# +str+ is a String holding a date-time representation.
|
|
# +comp+ specifies whether to interpret 2-digit years
|
|
# as 19XX (>= 69) or 20XX (< 69); the default is not to.
|
|
# The method will attempt to parse a date-time from the String
|
|
# using various heuristics; see #_parse in date/format.rb
|
|
# for more details. If parsing fails, an ArgumentError
|
|
# will be raised.
|
|
#
|
|
# The default +str+ is '-4712-01-01T00:00:00Z'; this is Julian
|
|
# Day Number day 0.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.parse(str='-4712-01-01T00:00:00Z', comp=false, sg=ITALY)
|
|
elem = _parse(str, comp)
|
|
new_with_hash(elem, sg)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
public :hour, :min, :sec, :sec_fraction, :zone, :offset, :new_offset
|
|
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class Time
|
|
|
|
def to_time() getlocal end
|
|
|
|
def to_date
|
|
jd = Date.civil_to_jd(year, mon, mday, Date::ITALY)
|
|
Date.new0(Date.jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), 0, Date::ITALY)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def to_datetime
|
|
jd = DateTime.civil_to_jd(year, mon, mday, DateTime::ITALY)
|
|
fr = DateTime.time_to_day_fraction(hour, min, [sec, 59].min) +
|
|
usec.to_r/86400000000
|
|
of = utc_offset.to_r/86400
|
|
DateTime.new0(DateTime.jd_to_ajd(jd, fr, of), of, DateTime::ITALY)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class Date
|
|
|
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def to_time() Time.local(year, mon, mday) end
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def to_date() self end
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|
def to_datetime() DateTime.new0(self.class.jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), @of, @sg) end
|
|
|
|
# Create a new Date object representing today.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.today(sg=ITALY) Time.now.to_date.new_start(sg) end
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|
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class DateTime < Date
|
|
|
|
def to_time
|
|
d = new_offset(0)
|
|
d.instance_eval do
|
|
Time.utc(year, mon, mday, hour, min, sec,
|
|
(sec_fraction * 86400000000).to_i)
|
|
end.
|
|
getlocal
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def to_date() Date.new0(self.class.jd_to_ajd(jd, 0, 0), 0, @sg) end
|
|
def to_datetime() self end
|
|
|
|
class << self; undef_method :today end
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|
|
|
# Create a new DateTime object representing the current time.
|
|
#
|
|
# +sg+ specifies the Day of Calendar Reform.
|
|
def self.now(sg=ITALY) Time.now.to_datetime.new_start(sg) end
|
|
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class Date
|
|
|
|
[ %w(os? julian?),
|
|
%w(ns? gregorian?),
|
|
%w(exist1? valid_jd?),
|
|
%w(exist2? valid_ordinal?),
|
|
%w(exist3? valid_date?),
|
|
%w(exist? valid_date?),
|
|
%w(existw? valid_commercial?),
|
|
%w(new1 jd),
|
|
%w(new2 ordinal),
|
|
%w(new3 new),
|
|
%w(neww commercial)
|
|
].each do |old, new|
|
|
module_eval <<-"end;"
|
|
def self.#{old}(*args, &block)
|
|
if $VERBOSE
|
|
warn("\#{caller.shift.sub(/:in .*/, '')}: " \
|
|
"warning: \#{self}::#{old} is deprecated; " \
|
|
"use \#{self}::#{new}")
|
|
end
|
|
#{new}(*args, &block)
|
|
end
|
|
end;
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
[ %w(os? julian?),
|
|
%w(ns? gregorian?),
|
|
%w(sg start),
|
|
%w(newsg new_start),
|
|
%w(of offset),
|
|
%w(newof new_offset)
|
|
].each do |old, new|
|
|
module_eval <<-"end;"
|
|
def #{old}(*args, &block)
|
|
if $VERBOSE
|
|
warn("\#{caller.shift.sub(/:in .*/, '')}: " \
|
|
"warning: \#{self.class}\##{old} is deprecated; " \
|
|
"use \#{self.class}\##{new}")
|
|
end
|
|
#{new}(*args, &block)
|
|
end
|
|
end;
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
private :of, :newof
|
|
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class DateTime < Date
|
|
|
|
public :of, :newof
|
|
|
|
end
|