15 KiB
DateTime
Tomo has a builtin datatype for representing a specific single point in time:
DateTime
. A DateTime object is internally represented using a UNIX timestamp
in seconds and a number of nanoseconds to represent sub-second times (in C, the
equivalent of struct timeval
). DateTime values do not represent calendar
dates or clock times, they represent an exact moment in time, such as the
moment when a file was last modified on the filesystem or the current moment
(DateTime.now()
).
⚠️⚠️⚠️ WARNING ⚠️⚠️⚠️ Dates and times are deeply counterintuitive and you should
be extremely cautious when writing code that deals with dates and times. Effort
has been made to ensure that Tomo's DateTime
code uses standard libraries and
is as correct as possible, but counterintuitive behaviors around time zones,
daylight savings time, leap seconds, and other anomalous time situations can
still cause bugs if you're not extremely careful.
Syntax
DateTime literals can be specified using ISO
8601 syntax with an optional
square-bracket delimited time zone name afterwards. A space may be used instead
of a T
in the ISO 8601 format for readability, and spaces may come before the
timezone.
2024-09-30
2024-09-30T13:57
2024-09-30 13:57
2024-09-30 13:57:01
2024-09-30 13:57:01 +04:00
2024-09-30 13:57:01 [America/New_York]
Time Zones
Because humans are not able to easily understand UNIX timestamps, the default
textual representation of DateTime
objects uses the current locale's
preferred representation of the DateTime in the current time zone:
>> DateTime.now()
= Sun Sep 29 18:20:12 2024 EDT
For various methods, it is assumed by default that users wish to perform calculations and specify datetimes using the local time zone and daylight savings time rules. For example, if a program is running in New York and it is currently 11pm on February 28th, 2023 (the last day of the month) in local time, it is assumed that "one month from now" refers to 11pm on March 28th, 2024 in local time, rather than referring to one month from the current UTC time. In that example, the initial time would be 3am March 1, 2023 in UTC, so one month later would be 3am April 1, 2023 in UTC, which is which is 11am March 31st in local time. Most users would be unpleasantly surprised to find out that when it's February 28th in local time, one month later is March 28th until 8pm, at which point it becomes March 31st!
For various functions where time zones matter, there is an optional timezone
argument that, if set, will override the timezone when performing calculations.
If unspecified, it is assumed that the current local timezone should be used.
Time zones are specified by name, such as America/New_York
or UTC
.
DateTime Methods
after
Description:
Returns a DateTime that occurs after the specified time differences. Time
differences may be either positive or negative.
Note: time offsets for days, months, weeks, and years do not refer to fixed
time intervals, but are relative to which date they are applied to. For
example, one year from January 1, 2024 is January 1, 2025, which is 366 days
later because 2024 is a leap year. Similarly, adding one month may add anywhere
from 28 to 31 days, depending on the starting month. Days and weeks are
affected by leap seconds. For this reason, after()
takes an argument,
timezone
which is used to determine in which timezone the offsets should be
calculated.
Usage:
datetime:after(seconds : Num = 0.0, minutes : Num = 0.0, hours : Num = 0.0, days : Int = 0, weeks : Int = 0, months : Int = 0, years : Int = 0, timezone : Text? = !Text -> DateTime)
Parameters:
seconds
(optional): An amount of seconds to offset the datetime (default: 0).minutes
(optional): An amount of minutes to offset the datetime (default: 0).hours
(optional): An amount of hours to offset the datetime (default: 0).days
(optional): An amount of days to offset the datetime (default: 0).weeks
(optional): An amount of weeks to offset the datetime (default: 0).months
(optional): An amount of months to offset the datetime (default: 0).years
(optional): An amount of years to offset the datetime (default: 0).timezone
(optional): If specified, perform perform the calculations in the given timezone. If unspecified, the current local timezone will be used.
Returns:
A new DateTime
offset by the given amount.
Example:
>> DateTime(2024, 9, 29, hour=19):after(days=1, minutes=30)
= Mon Sep 30 19:30:00 2024 EDT
date
Description:
Return a text representation of the datetime using the "%F"
format
specifier, which gives the date in YYYY-MM-DD
form.
Usage:
datetime:date(timezone : Text? = !Text -> Text)
Parameters:
timezone
(optional): If specified, give the date in the given timezone (otherwise, use the current local timezone).
Returns:
The date in YYYY-MM-DD
format.
Example:
>> DateTime(2024, 9, 29):date()
= "2024-09-29"
format
Description:
Using the C-style strftime
format
options, return a text representation of the given date in the given format. If
timezone
is specified, use that timezone instead of the current local
timezone.
Usage:
datetime:format(format: Text = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z", timezone : Text? = !Text -> Text)
Parameters:
format
: Thestrftime
format to use (default:"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z"
).timezone
(optional): If specified, use the given timezone (otherwise, use the current local timezone).
Returns:
Nothing.
Example:
>> DateTime(2024, 9, 29):format("%A")
= "Sunday"
from_unix_timestamp
Description:
Return a datetime object that represents the same moment in time as
the given UNIX epoch timestamp (seconds since January 1, 1970 UTC).
Usage:
DateTime.from_unix_timestamp(timestamp: Int64 -> DateTime)
Parameters:
timestamp
: The UNIX timestamp.
Returns:
A DateTime
object representing the same moment as the given UNIX timestamp.
Example:
# In the New York timezone:
>> DateTime.from_unix_timestamp(0)
= Wed Dec 31 19:00:00 1969
get
Description:
Get various components of the given datetime object and store them in the
provided optional fields.
Usage:
datetime:get(year : &Int? = !&Int, month : &Int? = !&Int, day : &Int? = !&Int, hour : &Int? = !&Int, minute : &Int? = !&Int, second : &Int? = !&Int, nanosecond : &Int? = !&Int, weekday : &Int? = !&Int, timezone : Text? = !Text -> Void)
Parameters:
year
: If non-null, store the year here.month
: If non-null, store the month here (1-12).day
: If non-null, store the day of the month here (1-31).hour
: If non-null, store the hour of the day here (0-23).minute
: If non-null, store the minute of the hour here (0-59).second
: If non-null, store the second of the minute here (0-59).nanosecond
: If non-null, store the nanosecond of the second here (0-1,000,000,000).weekday
: If non-null, store the day of the week here (sunday=1, saturday=7)timezone
(optional): If specified, give values in the given timezone (otherwise, use the current local timezone).
Returns: Nothing.
Example:
dt := DateTime(2024, 9, 29)
month := 0
dt:get(month=&month)
>> month
= 9
get_local_timezone
Description:
Get the local timezone's name (e.g. America/New_York
or UTC
. By default,
this value is read from /etc/localtime
, however, this can be overridden by
calling DateTime.set_local_timezone(...)
.
Usage:
DateTime.get_local_timezone(->Text)
Parameters:
None.
Returns: The name of the current local timezone.
Example:
>> DateTime.get_local_timezone()
= "America/New_York"
hours_till
Description:
Return the number of hours until a given datetime.
Usage:
datetime:hours_till(then:DateTime -> Num)
Parameters:
then
: Another datetime that we want to calculate the time offset from (in hours).
Returns: The number of hours (possibly fractional, possibly negative) until the given time.
Example:
the_future := now():after(hours=1, minutes=30)
>> now():hours_till(the_future)
= 1.5
minutes_till
Description:
Return the number of minutes until a given datetime.
Usage:
datetime:minutes_till(then:DateTime -> Num)
Parameters:
then
: Another datetime that we want to calculate the time offset from (in minutes).
Returns: The number of minutes (possibly fractional, possibly negative) until the given time.
Example:
the_future := now():after(minutes=1, seconds=30)
>> now():minutes_till(the_future)
= 1.5
new
Description:
Return a new DateTime
object representing the given time parameters expressed
in local time. This function is the same as calling DateTime
directly as a
constructor.
Usage:
DateTime.new(year : Int, month : Int, day : Int, hour : Int = 0, minute : Int = 0, second : Num = 0.0 -> DateTime)
Parameters:
year
: The year.month
: The month of the year (1-12).day
: The day of the month (1-31).hour
: The hour of the day (0-23) (default: 0).minute
: The minute of the hour (0-59) (default: 0).second
: The second of the minute (0-59) (default: 0.0).
Returns:
A DateTime
representing the given information in local time. If the given
parameters exceed reasonable bounds, the time values will wrap around. For
example, DateTime.new(..., hour=3, minute=65)
is the same as
DateTime.new(..., hour=4, minute=5)
. If any arguments cannot fit in a 32-bit
integer, an error will be raised.
Example:
>> DateTime.new(2024, 9, 29)
= Mon Sep 30 00:00:00 2024 EDT
# March 1642, 2020:
>> DateTime(2020, 4, 1643)
= Sat Sep 28 00:00:00 2024 EDT
now
Description:
Get a DateTime
object representing the current date and time. This function
is the same as the global function now()
.
Usage:
DateTime.now(->DateTime)
Parameters:
None.
Returns:
Returns a DateTime
object representing the current date and time.
Example:
>> DateTime.now()
= Sun Sep 29 20:22:48 2024 EDT
parse
Description:
Return a new DateTime
object parsed from the given string in the given format,
or a null value if the value could not be successfully parsed.
Usage:
DateTime.parse(text: Text, format: Text = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z" -> DateTime?)
Parameters:
text
: The text to parse.format
: The date format of the text being parsed (see: strptime for more info on this format) (default:"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z"
).
Returns:
If the text was successfully parsed according to the given format, return a
DateTime
representing that information. Otherwise, return a null value.
Example:
>> DateTime.parse("2024-09-29", "%Y-%m-%d")!
= Sun Sep 29 00:00:00 2024 EDT
>> DateTime.parse("???", "%Y-%m-%d")
= !DateTime
relative
Description:
Return a plain English textual representation of the approximate time difference
between two DateTime
s. For example: 5 minutes ago
or 1 day later
Usage:
datetime:relative(relative_to : DateTime = DateTime.now(), timezone : Text? = !Text -> Text)
Parameters:
relative_to
(optional): The time against which the relative time is calculated (default:DateTime.now()
).timezone
(optional): If specified, perform calculations in the given timezone (otherwise, use the current local timezone).
Returns:
Return a plain English textual representation of the approximate time
difference between two DateTime
s. For example: 5 minutes ago
or 1 day later
. Return values are approximate and use only one significant unit of
measure with one significant digit, so a difference of 1.6 days will be
represented as 2 days later
. Datetimes in the past will have the suffix " ago"
, while datetimes in the future will have the suffix " later"
.
Example:
>> now():after(days=2):relative()
= "2 days later"
>> now():after(minutes=-65):relative()
= "1 hour ago"
seconds_till
Description:
Return the number of seconds until a given datetime.
Usage:
datetime:seconds_till(then:DateTime -> Num)
Parameters:
then
: Another datetime that we want to calculate the time offset from (in seconds).
Returns: The number of seconds (possibly fractional, possibly negative) until the given time.
Example:
the_future := now():after(seconds=1)
>> now():seconds_till(the_future)
= 1
set_local_timezone
Description:
Set the current local timezone to a given value by name (e.g.
America/New_York
or UTC
). The local timezone is used as the default
timezone for performing calculations and constructing DateTime
objects from
component parts. It's also used as the default way that DateTime
objects are
converted to text.
Usage:
DateTime.set_local_timezone(timezone : Text? = !Text -> Void)
Parameters:
timezone
(optional): if specified, set the current local timezone to the timezone with the given name. If null, reset the current local timezone to the system default (the value referenced in/etc/localtime
).
Returns: Nothing.
Example:
DateTime.set_local_timezone("America/Los_Angeles")
time
Description:
Return a text representation of the time component of the given datetime.
Usage:
datetime:time(seconds : Bool = no, am_pm : Bool = yes, timezone : Text? = !Text -> Text)
Parameters:
seconds
: Whether to include seconds in the time (default:no
).am_pm
: Whether to use am/pm in the representation or use a 24-hour clock (default:yes
).timezone
(optional): If specified, give the time in the given timezone (otherwise, use the current local timezone).
Returns:
A text representation of the time component of the datetime.
Example:
dt := DateTime(2024, 9, 29, hours=13, minutes=59, seconds=30)
>> dt:time()
= "1:59pm"
>> dt:time(am_pm=no)
= "13:59"
>> dt:time(seconds=yes)
= "1:59:30pm"
unix_timestamp
Description: Get the UNIX timestamp of the given datetime (seconds since the UNIX epoch: January 1, 1970 UTC).
Usage:
datetime:unix_timestamp(->Int64)
Parameters:
None.
Returns:
A 64-bit integer representation of the UNIX timestamp.
Example:
>> now():unix_timestamp()
= 1727654730[64]