A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times 🦀
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A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times.
• Website • Documentation • Report Bug • Request Feature • Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT)
library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease. It offers a wide range of functions, macros, and data structures for performing date and time operations, such as creating, parsing, validating, and formatting date-time objects.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime
objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, providing accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it offers mechanisms for validating input dates and times, ensuring reliable and precise operations.
The DateTime (DTT)
library offers the following features:
Core Fields:
datetime
: The date and time in UTC (PrimitiveDateTime
).offset
: The timezone offset in UTC (UtcOffset
).Core Methods:
new()
: Creates a new DateTime
instance with the current UTC time.new_with_tz(tz: &str)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with the specified timezone.new_with_custom_offset(hours: i8, minutes: i8)
: Creates a DateTime
object with a custom UTC offset.from_components(year: i32, month: u8, day: u8, hour: u8, minute: u8, second: u8, offset: UtcOffset)
: Creates a DateTime
object from individual date and time components.update(&self)
: Updates the DateTime
object to the current date and time.now()
: Returns the current DateTime
.from_str(s: &str)
: Parses a string into a DateTime
instance (implementation of FromStr
trait).default()
: Returns the current UTC time as the default value for DateTime
.Parsing and Formatting:
parse(input: &str)
: Parses a date-time string into a DateTime
object.parse_custom_format(input: &str, format: &str)
: Parses a date-time string using a custom format.format(&self, format_str: &str)
: Formats the DateTime
object as a string using the specified format.format_rfc3339(&self)
: Formats the DateTime
as an RFC 3339 string.format_iso8601(&self)
: Formats the DateTime
as an ISO 8601 string.Date-Time Manipulation:
convert_to_tz(&self, new_tz: &str)
: Converts the DateTime
object to a different timezone.unix_timestamp(&self)
: Returns the Unix timestamp of the DateTime
object.add_days(&self, days: i64)
: Adds a specified number of days to the DateTime
.add_months(&self, months: i32)
: Adds a specified number of months to the DateTime
.add_years(&self, years: i32)
: Adds a specified number of years to the DateTime
.sub_months(&self, months: i32)
: Subtracts a specified number of months from the DateTime
.sub_years(&self, years: i32)
: Subtracts a specified number of years from the DateTime
.next_day(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance representing the next day.previous_day(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance representing the previous day.start_of_week(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the week.end_of_week(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the week.start_of_month(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the month.end_of_month(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the month.start_of_year(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the year.end_of_year(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the year.is_within_range(&self, start: &Self, end: &Self)
: Checks if the DateTime
falls within a specific range.duration_since(&self, other: &Self)
: Calculates the duration between two DateTime
instances.Getters:
year(&self)
: Returns the year.month(&self)
: Returns the month.day(&self)
: Returns the day of the month.hour(&self)
: Returns the hour.minute(&self)
: Returns the minute.second(&self)
: Returns the second.microsecond(&self)
: Returns the microsecond.weekday(&self)
: Returns the weekday.ordinal(&self)
: Returns the day of the year (ordinal).iso_week(&self)
: Returns the ISO week number.offset(&self)
: Returns the UTC offset.Setters:
set_date(&self, year: i32, month: u8, day: u8)
: Sets a new date for the DateTime
instance.set_time(&self, hour: u8, minute: u8, second: u8)
: Sets a new time for the DateTime
instance.Validation:
is_valid_day(day: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid day of the month.is_valid_hour(hour: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid hour of the day.is_valid_minute(minute: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid minute of the hour.is_valid_second(second: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid second of the minute.is_valid_month(month: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid month of the year.is_valid_year(year: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid year.is_valid_microsecond(microsecond: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid microsecond.is_valid_ordinal(ordinal: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ordinal day of the year.is_valid_iso_week(week: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO week number.is_valid_time(time: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid time in HH:MM:SS
format.is_valid_iso_8601(date: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO 8601 formatted date.Utility Functions:
format_time_in_timezone(tz: &str, format: &str)
: Formats the current time for a specific timezone.Arithmetic Operations:
Add<Duration>
: Adds a Duration
to the DateTime
instance.Sub<Duration>
: Subtracts a Duration
from the DateTime
instance.Comparison Operations:
PartialOrd
: Allows partial ordering comparisons between DateTime
instances.Ord
: Allows total ordering comparisons between DateTime
instances.Hashing:
Hash
: Allows DateTime
instances to be used as keys in hash-based collections.Macros:
dtt_now!()
: Generates the current date and time.dtt_parse!(input)
: Parses a date-time string into a DateTime
object.dtt_print!(datetime)
: Prints a DateTime
object.dtt_vec![]
: Creates a vector.dtt_map!{}
: Creates a map.dtt_assert!
: Asserts conditions during testing.is_valid!
: Checks the validity of various date-time components.dtt_is_valid_function!(func_name)
: Defines a custom validation function.dtt_new_with_tz!(tz)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with a specified timezone.dtt_add_days!(datetime, days)
: Adds days to a DateTime
object.dtt_sub_days!(datetime, days)
: Subtracts days from a DateTime
object.dtt_diff_seconds!(datetime1, datetime2)
: Calculates the difference in seconds between two DateTime
objects.dtt_diff_days!(datetime1, datetime2)
: Calculates the difference in days between two DateTime
objects.dtt_clone!
: Creates a deep copy of a DateTime
object.dtt_format!
: Formats a DateTime
object using a provided format string.dtt_create_vec!
: Creates a new vector containing provided elements.dtt_min!
: Returns the minimum of given values.dtt_max!
: Returns the maximum of given values.dtt_join!
: Joins a vector of strings into a single string.dtt_print_vec!
: Prints a vector of elements to the console.Helper Functions:
days_in_month(year: i32, month: u8)
: Determines the number of days in a given month and year.is_leap_year(year: i32)
: Determines if a year is a leap year.Error Handling:
The library provides comprehensive error handling through the DateTimeError
enum, allowing for robust error management in date and time operations.
Timezone Support:
DateTime (DTT) offers extensive timezone support, allowing for creation and manipulation of date-time objects across different timezones.
Serialization and Deserialization:
The library supports serialization and deserialization of DateTime
objects using serde
, facilitating easy integration with various data formats.
Published by github-actions[bot] about 2 months ago
A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times.
• Website • Documentation • Report Bug • Request Feature • Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT)
library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease. It offers a wide range of functions, macros, and data structures for performing date and time operations, such as creating, parsing, validating, and formatting date-time objects.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime
objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, providing accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it offers mechanisms for validating input dates and times, ensuring reliable and precise operations.
The DateTime (DTT)
library offers the following features:
Core Fields:
datetime
: The date and time in UTC (PrimitiveDateTime
).offset
: The timezone offset in UTC (UtcOffset
).Core Methods:
new()
: Creates a new DateTime
instance with the current UTC time.new_with_tz(tz: &str)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with the specified timezone.new_with_custom_offset(hours: i8, minutes: i8)
: Creates a DateTime
object with a custom UTC offset.from_components(year: i32, month: u8, day: u8, hour: u8, minute: u8, second: u8, offset: UtcOffset)
: Creates a DateTime
object from individual date and time components.update(&self)
: Updates the DateTime
object to the current date and time.now()
: Returns the current DateTime
.from_str(s: &str)
: Parses a string into a DateTime
instance (implementation of FromStr
trait).default()
: Returns the current UTC time as the default value for DateTime
.Parsing and Formatting:
parse(input: &str)
: Parses a date-time string into a DateTime
object.parse_custom_format(input: &str, format: &str)
: Parses a date-time string using a custom format.format(&self, format_str: &str)
: Formats the DateTime
object as a string using the specified format.format_rfc3339(&self)
: Formats the DateTime
as an RFC 3339 string.format_iso8601(&self)
: Formats the DateTime
as an ISO 8601 string.Date-Time Manipulation:
convert_to_tz(&self, new_tz: &str)
: Converts the DateTime
object to a different timezone.unix_timestamp(&self)
: Returns the Unix timestamp of the DateTime
object.add_days(&self, days: i64)
: Adds a specified number of days to the DateTime
.add_months(&self, months: i32)
: Adds a specified number of months to the DateTime
.add_years(&self, years: i32)
: Adds a specified number of years to the DateTime
.sub_months(&self, months: i32)
: Subtracts a specified number of months from the DateTime
.sub_years(&self, years: i32)
: Subtracts a specified number of years from the DateTime
.next_day(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance representing the next day.previous_day(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance representing the previous day.start_of_week(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the week.end_of_week(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the week.start_of_month(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the month.end_of_month(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the month.start_of_year(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the year.end_of_year(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the year.is_within_range(&self, start: &Self, end: &Self)
: Checks if the DateTime
falls within a specific range.duration_since(&self, other: &Self)
: Calculates the duration between two DateTime
instances.Getters:
year(&self)
: Returns the year.month(&self)
: Returns the month.day(&self)
: Returns the day of the month.hour(&self)
: Returns the hour.minute(&self)
: Returns the minute.second(&self)
: Returns the second.microsecond(&self)
: Returns the microsecond.weekday(&self)
: Returns the weekday.ordinal(&self)
: Returns the day of the year (ordinal).iso_week(&self)
: Returns the ISO week number.offset(&self)
: Returns the UTC offset.Setters:
set_date(&self, year: i32, month: u8, day: u8)
: Sets a new date for the DateTime
instance.set_time(&self, hour: u8, minute: u8, second: u8)
: Sets a new time for the DateTime
instance.Validation:
is_valid_day(day: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid day of the month.is_valid_hour(hour: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid hour of the day.is_valid_minute(minute: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid minute of the hour.is_valid_second(second: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid second of the minute.is_valid_month(month: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid month of the year.is_valid_year(year: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid year.is_valid_microsecond(microsecond: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid microsecond.is_valid_ordinal(ordinal: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ordinal day of the year.is_valid_iso_week(week: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO week number.is_valid_time(time: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid time in HH:MM:SS
format.is_valid_iso_8601(date: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO 8601 formatted date.Utility Functions:
format_time_in_timezone(tz: &str, format: &str)
: Formats the current time for a specific timezone.Arithmetic Operations:
Add<Duration>
: Adds a Duration
to the DateTime
instance.Sub<Duration>
: Subtracts a Duration
from the DateTime
instance.Comparison Operations:
PartialOrd
: Allows partial ordering comparisons between DateTime
instances.Ord
: Allows total ordering comparisons between DateTime
instances.Hashing:
Hash
: Allows DateTime
instances to be used as keys in hash-based collections.Macros:
dtt_now!()
: Generates the current date and time.dtt_parse!(input)
: Parses a date-time string into a DateTime
object.dtt_print!(datetime)
: Prints a DateTime
object.dtt_vec![]
: Creates a vector.dtt_map!{}
: Creates a map.dtt_assert!
: Asserts conditions during testing.is_valid!
: Checks the validity of various date-time components.dtt_is_valid_function!(func_name)
: Defines a custom validation function.dtt_new_with_tz!(tz)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with a specified timezone.dtt_add_days!(datetime, days)
: Adds days to a DateTime
object.dtt_sub_days!(datetime, days)
: Subtracts days from a DateTime
object.dtt_diff_seconds!(datetime1, datetime2)
: Calculates the difference in seconds between two DateTime
objects.dtt_diff_days!(datetime1, datetime2)
: Calculates the difference in days between two DateTime
objects.dtt_clone!
: Creates a deep copy of a DateTime
object.dtt_format!
: Formats a DateTime
object using a provided format string.dtt_create_vec!
: Creates a new vector containing provided elements.dtt_min!
: Returns the minimum of given values.dtt_max!
: Returns the maximum of given values.dtt_join!
: Joins a vector of strings into a single string.dtt_print_vec!
: Prints a vector of elements to the console.Helper Functions:
days_in_month(year: i32, month: u8)
: Determines the number of days in a given month and year.is_leap_year(year: i32)
: Determines if a year is a leap year.Error Handling:
The library provides comprehensive error handling through the DateTimeError
enum, allowing for robust error management in date and time operations.
Timezone Support:
DateTime (DTT) offers extensive timezone support, allowing for creation and manipulation of date-time objects across different timezones.
Serialization and Deserialization:
The library supports serialization and deserialization of DateTime
objects using serde
, facilitating easy integration with various data formats.
fix(dtt): 🚑 critical fixes for documentation
Merge pull request #70 from sebastienrousseau/feat/dtt
Full Changelog: https://github.com/sebastienrousseau/dtt/compare/v0.0.6...v0.0.7
Published by github-actions[bot] about 2 months ago
A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times.
• Website • Documentation • Report Bug • Request Feature • Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT)
library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease. It offers a wide range of functions, macros, and data structures for performing date and time operations, such as creating, parsing, validating, and formatting date-time objects.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime
objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, providing accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it offers mechanisms for validating input dates and times, ensuring reliable and precise operations.
The DateTime (DTT)
library offers the following features:
Core Fields:
datetime
: The date and time in UTC (PrimitiveDateTime
).offset
: The timezone offset in UTC (UtcOffset
).Core Methods:
new()
: Creates a new DateTime
instance with the current UTC time.new_with_tz(tz: &str)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with the specified timezone.new_with_custom_offset(hours: i8, minutes: i8)
: Creates a DateTime
object with a custom UTC offset.from_components(year: i32, month: u8, day: u8, hour: u8, minute: u8, second: u8, offset: UtcOffset)
: Creates a DateTime
object from individual date and time components.update(&self)
: Updates the DateTime
object to the current date and time.now()
: Returns the current DateTime
.from_str(s: &str)
: Parses a string into a DateTime
instance (implementation of FromStr
trait).default()
: Returns the current UTC time as the default value for DateTime
.Parsing and Formatting:
parse(input: &str)
: Parses a date-time string into a DateTime
object.parse_custom_format(input: &str, format: &str)
: Parses a date-time string using a custom format.format(&self, format_str: &str)
: Formats the DateTime
object as a string using the specified format.format_rfc3339(&self)
: Formats the DateTime
as an RFC 3339 string.format_iso8601(&self)
: Formats the DateTime
as an ISO 8601 string.Date-Time Manipulation:
convert_to_tz(&self, new_tz: &str)
: Converts the DateTime
object to a different timezone.unix_timestamp(&self)
: Returns the Unix timestamp of the DateTime
object.add_days(&self, days: i64)
: Adds a specified number of days to the DateTime
.add_months(&self, months: i32)
: Adds a specified number of months to the DateTime
.add_years(&self, years: i32)
: Adds a specified number of years to the DateTime
.sub_months(&self, months: i32)
: Subtracts a specified number of months from the DateTime
.sub_years(&self, years: i32)
: Subtracts a specified number of years from the DateTime
.next_day(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance representing the next day.previous_day(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance representing the previous day.start_of_week(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the week.end_of_week(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the week.start_of_month(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the month.end_of_month(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the month.start_of_year(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the start of the year.end_of_year(&self)
: Returns a new DateTime
instance at the end of the year.is_within_range(&self, start: &Self, end: &Self)
: Checks if the DateTime
falls within a specific range.duration_since(&self, other: &Self)
: Calculates the duration between two DateTime
instances.Getters:
year(&self)
: Returns the year.month(&self)
: Returns the month.day(&self)
: Returns the day of the month.hour(&self)
: Returns the hour.minute(&self)
: Returns the minute.second(&self)
: Returns the second.microsecond(&self)
: Returns the microsecond.weekday(&self)
: Returns the weekday.ordinal(&self)
: Returns the day of the year (ordinal).iso_week(&self)
: Returns the ISO week number.offset(&self)
: Returns the UTC offset.Setters:
set_date(&self, year: i32, month: u8, day: u8)
: Sets a new date for the DateTime
instance.set_time(&self, hour: u8, minute: u8, second: u8)
: Sets a new time for the DateTime
instance.Validation:
is_valid_day(day: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid day of the month.is_valid_hour(hour: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid hour of the day.is_valid_minute(minute: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid minute of the hour.is_valid_second(second: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid second of the minute.is_valid_month(month: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid month of the year.is_valid_year(year: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid year.is_valid_microsecond(microsecond: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid microsecond.is_valid_ordinal(ordinal: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ordinal day of the year.is_valid_iso_week(week: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO week number.is_valid_time(time: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid time in HH:MM:SS
format.is_valid_iso_8601(date: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO 8601 formatted date.Utility Functions:
format_time_in_timezone(tz: &str, format: &str)
: Formats the current time for a specific timezone.Arithmetic Operations:
Add<Duration>
: Adds a Duration
to the DateTime
instance.Sub<Duration>
: Subtracts a Duration
from the DateTime
instance.Comparison Operations:
PartialOrd
: Allows partial ordering comparisons between DateTime
instances.Ord
: Allows total ordering comparisons between DateTime
instances.Hashing:
Hash
: Allows DateTime
instances to be used as keys in hash-based collections.Macros:
dtt_now!()
: Generates the current date and time.dtt_parse!(input)
: Parses a date-time string into a DateTime
object.dtt_print!(datetime)
: Prints a DateTime
object.dtt_vec![]
: Creates a vector.dtt_map!{}
: Creates a map.dtt_assert!
: Asserts conditions during testing.is_valid!
: Checks the validity of various date-time components.dtt_is_valid_function!(func_name)
: Defines a custom validation function.dtt_new_with_tz!(tz)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with a specified timezone.dtt_add_days!(datetime, days)
: Adds days to a DateTime
object.dtt_sub_days!(datetime, days)
: Subtracts days from a DateTime
object.dtt_diff_seconds!(datetime1, datetime2)
: Calculates the difference in seconds between two DateTime
objects.dtt_diff_days!(datetime1, datetime2)
: Calculates the difference in days between two DateTime
objects.dtt_clone!
: Creates a deep copy of a DateTime
object.dtt_format!
: Formats a DateTime
object using a provided format string.dtt_create_vec!
: Creates a new vector containing provided elements.dtt_min!
: Returns the minimum of given values.dtt_max!
: Returns the maximum of given values.dtt_join!
: Joins a vector of strings into a single string.dtt_print_vec!
: Prints a vector of elements to the console.Helper Functions:
days_in_month(year: i32, month: u8)
: Determines the number of days in a given month and year.is_leap_year(year: i32)
: Determines if a year is a leap year.Error Handling:
The library provides comprehensive error handling through the DateTimeError
enum, allowing for robust error management in date and time operations.
Timezone Support:
DateTime (DTT) offers extensive timezone support, allowing for creation and manipulation of date-time objects across different timezones.
Serialization and Deserialization:
The library supports serialization and deserialization of DateTime
objects using serde
, facilitating easy integration with various data formats.
Merge pull request #70 from sebastienrousseau/feat/dtt
Full Changelog: https://github.com/sebastienrousseau/dtt/compare/v0.0.6...v0.0.7
Published by github-actions[bot] 6 months ago
A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times
Part of the Mini Functions family of libraries.
• Website • Documentation • Report Bug • Request Feature • Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT)
library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease. It offers a range of functions and data structures that allow you to perform various date and time operations with ease, such as determining the day of the month, hour of the day, working with ISO 8601 date and time formats, and many others.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime
objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, ensuring that you always have accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it provides a mechanism to validate input dates and times, ensuring that you always have accurate information to work with.
The DateTime (DTT)
struct includes the following fields and methods:
Feature | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
day |
Day of the month: (1-31) | u8 |
hour |
Hour of the day: (0-23) | u8 |
iso_8601 |
ISO 8601 date and time: (e.g. "2023-01-01T00:00:00+00:00") | String |
iso_week |
ISO week number: (1-53) | u8 |
microsecond |
Microsecond: (0-999999) | u32 |
minute |
Minute of the hour: (0-59) | u8 |
month |
Month: (e.g. "January") | String |
now |
Now object: (e.g. "2023-01-01") | String |
offset |
Offset from UTC: (e.g. "+00:00") | String |
ordinal |
Ordinal date: (1-366) | u16 |
second |
Second of the minute: (0-59) | u8 |
time |
Time object: (e.g. "00:00:00") | String |
tz |
Time zone object: (e.g. "UTC") | String |
weekday |
Weekday object: (e.g. "Monday") | String |
year |
Year object: (e.g. "2023") | i32 |
new()
: Creates a new DateTime
object with the current UTC time.new_with_tz(tz: &str)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with the specified timezone.is_valid_day(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid day of the month.is_valid_hour(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid hour of the day.is_valid_second(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid second of the minute.is_valid_minute(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid minute of the hour.is_valid_month(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid month of the year.is_valid_ordinal(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ordinal date.is_valid_time(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid time.is_valid_iso_week(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO week number.is_valid_iso_8601(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid ISO 8601 date and time.is_valid_microsecond(input: &str)
: Checks if the input represents a valid microsecond.update(&mut self)
: Updates the DateTime
object with the current date and time based on the timezone.add_days(&self, days: i32)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with the specified number of days added.next_day(&self)
: Creates a new DateTime
object representing the next day.previous_day(&self)
: Creates a new DateTime
object representing the previous day.relative_delta(&self)
: Creates a new DateTime
object with the relative delta based on the current date and time.format(&self, format_str: &str)
: Formats the DateTime
object as a string using the specified format.The library also provides various getter methods to extract the individual components of the DateTime
object, such as year()
, month()
, day()
, hour()
, minute()
, second()
, microsecond()
, weekday()
, ordinal()
, iso_8601()
, iso_week()
, time()
, tz()
, and offset()
.
Additionally, the DateTime (DTT)
struct implements the FromStr
trait, allowing for parsing a string into a DateTime
object.
format!
.macros.rs
to ensure robustness.These updates aim to enhance the usability, stability, and documentation of the DateTime library.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/sebastienrousseau/dtt/compare/v0.0.5...v0.0.6
Published by sebastienrousseau 11 months ago
A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times
Part of the Mini Functions family of libraries.
• Website • Documentation • Report Bug • Request Feature • Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT)
library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease.
It offers a range of functions and data structures that allow you to perform various date and time operations with ease, such as determining the day of the month, hour of the day, working with ISO 8601 date and time formats, and many others.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, ensuring that you always have accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it provides a mechanism to validate input dates and times, ensuring that you always have accurate information to work with.
The library DateTime (DTT)
provides date and time types and methods to make it easier to manipulate dates and times. It uses the serde library to derive the Deserialize and Serialize traits to convert the DateTime (DTT)
struct to and from various data formats. It also uses the time and regex crates to deal with time conversions and regular expressions respectively.
The DateTime (DTT)
struct includes fields such as:
Feature | Description |
---|---|
day |
Day of the month: (01-31) |
hour |
Hour of the day: (00-23) |
iso_8601 |
ISO 8601 date and time: (e.g. "2023-01-01T00:00:00+00:00") |
iso_week |
ISO week number: (1-53) |
microsecond |
Microsecond: (0-999999) |
minute |
Minute of the hour: (0-59) |
month |
Month: (e.g. "January") |
now |
Now object: (e.g. "2023-01-01") |
offset |
Offset from UTC: (e.g. "+00:00") |
ordinal |
Ordinal date: (1-366) |
second |
Second of the minute: (0-59) |
time |
Time object: (e.g. "00:00:00") |
tz |
Time zone object: (e.g. "UTC") |
weekday |
Weekday object: (e.g. "Monday") |
year |
Year object: (e.g. "2023") |
Each of which represents different aspects of a date and time.
The DateTime (DTT)
struct has two methods to create instances: new
and new_with_tz
. new
creates a new DateTime (DTT)
object with UTC timezone, and new_with_tz
creates a new DateTime (DTT)
object with a custom timezone.
It also includes a method is_valid_day
which checks if the input string represents a valid day of the week. It also includes a method is_valid_month
which checks if the input string represents a valid month of the year.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/sebastienrousseau/dtt/compare/v0.0.4...v0.0.5
Published by github-actions[bot] over 1 year ago
A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times
Part of the Mini Functions family of libraries.
• Website • Documentation • Report Bug • Request Feature • Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT)
library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease.
It offers a range of functions and data structures that allow you to perform various date and time operations with ease, such as determining the day of the month, hour of the day, working with ISO 8601 date and time formats, and many others.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, ensuring that you always have accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it provides a mechanism to validate input dates and times, ensuring that you always have accurate information to work with.
The library DateTime (DTT)
provides date and time types and methods to make it easier to manipulate dates and times. It uses the serde library to derive the Deserialize and Serialize traits to convert the DateTime (DTT)
struct to and from various data formats. It also uses the time and regex crates to deal with time conversions and regular expressions respectively.
The DateTime (DTT)
struct includes fields such as:
Feature | Description |
---|---|
day |
Day of the month: (01-31) |
hour |
Hour of the day: (00-23) |
iso_8601 |
ISO 8601 date and time: (e.g. "2023-01-01T00:00:00+00:00") |
iso_week |
ISO week number: (1-53) |
microsecond |
Microsecond: (0-999999) |
minute |
Minute of the hour: (0-59) |
month |
Month: (e.g. "January") |
now |
Now object: (e.g. "2023-01-01") |
offset |
Offset from UTC: (e.g. "+00:00") |
ordinal |
Ordinal date: (1-366) |
second |
Second of the minute: (0-59) |
time |
Time object: (e.g. "00:00:00") |
tz |
Time zone object: (e.g. "UTC") |
weekday |
Weekday object: (e.g. "Monday") |
year |
Year object: (e.g. "2023") |
Each of which represents different aspects of a date and time.
The DateTime (DTT)
struct has two methods to create instances: new
and new_with_tz
. new
creates a new DateTime (DTT)
object with UTC timezone, and new_with_tz
creates a new DateTime (DTT)
object with a custom timezone.
It also includes a method is_valid_day
which checks if the input string represents a valid day of the week. It also includes a method is_valid_month
which checks if the input string represents a valid month of the year.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/sebastienrousseau/dtt/compare/v0.0.3...v0.0.4
Published by github-actions[bot] over 1 year ago
Website
• Documentation
• Report Bug
• Request Feature
• Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT) library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease.
It offers a range of functions and data structures that allow you to perform various date and time operations with ease, such as determining the day of the month, hour of the day, working with ISO 8601 date and time formats, and many others.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, ensuring that you always have accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it provides a mechanism to validate input dates and times, ensuring that you always have accurate information to work with.
The library DateTime
provides date and time types and methods to make it easier to manipulate dates and times. It uses the serde library to derive the Deserialize and Serialize traits to convert the DateTime
struct to and from various data formats. It also uses the time and regex crates to deal with time conversions and regular expressions respectively.
The DateTime
struct includes fields such as:
Feature | Description |
---|---|
day |
Day of the month: (01-31) |
hour |
Hour of the day: (00-23) |
iso_8601 |
ISO 8601 date and time: (e.g. "2023-01-01T00:00:00+00:00") |
iso_week |
ISO week number: (1-53) |
microsecond |
Microsecond: (0-999999) |
minute |
Minute of the hour: (0-59) |
month |
Month: (e.g. "January") |
now |
Now object: (e.g. "2023-01-01") |
offset |
Offset from UTC: (e.g. "+00:00") |
ordinal |
Ordinal date: (1-366) |
second |
Second of the minute: (0-59) |
time |
Time object: (e.g. "00:00:00") |
tz |
Time zone object: (e.g. "UTC") |
weekday |
Weekday object: (e.g. "Monday") |
year |
Year object: (e.g. "2023") |
Each of which represents different aspects of a date and time.
The DateTime
struct has two methods to create instances: new
and new_with_tz
. new
creates a new DateTime
object with UTC timezone, and new_with_tz
creates a new DateTime
object with a custom timezone.
It also includes a method is_valid_day
which checks if the input string represents a valid day of the week. It also includes a method is_valid_month
which checks if the input string represents a valid month of the year.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/sebastienrousseau/dtt/compare/v0.0.2...v0.0.3
Published by github-actions[bot] over 1 year ago
A Rust library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates and times
Website
• Documentation
• Report Bug
• Request Feature
• Contributing Guidelines
The DateTime (DTT) library is a comprehensive and flexible tool that enables developers to manage dates and times with ease.
It offers a range of functions and data structures that allow you to perform various date and time operations with ease, such as determining the day of the month, hour of the day, working with ISO 8601 date and time formats, and many others.
The library supports the creation of new DateTime objects with either UTC or custom timezone specifications, ensuring that you always have accurate and relevant date and time information. Additionally, it provides a mechanism to validate input dates and times, ensuring that you always have accurate information to work with.
The library DateTime
provides date and time types and methods to make it easier to manipulate dates and times. It uses the serde library to derive the Deserialize and Serialize traits to convert the DateTime
struct to and from various data formats. It also uses the time and regex crates to deal with time conversions and regular expressions respectively.
The DateTime
struct includes fields such as day
, hour
, iso_8601
, iso_week
, microsecond
, minute
, month
, now
, offset
, ordinal
, second
, time
, tz
, weekday
, and year
, each of which represent different aspects of a date and time.
The DateTime
struct has two methods to create instances: new
and new_with_tz
. new
creates a new DateTime
object with UTC timezone, and new_with_tz
creates a new DateTime
object with a custom timezone.
It also includes a method is_valid_day
which checks if the input string represents a valid day of the week. It also includes a method is_valid_month
which checks if the input string represents a valid month of the year.
It takes just a few minutes to get up and running with dtt
.
dtt
requires Rust 1.67.0 or later.
ℹ️ Info: Please check out our website for more information and find our documentation on docs.rs, lib.rs and
crates.io.
To use dtt
in your project, add the following to your Cargo.toml
file:
[dependencies]
dtt = "0.0.2"
Add the following to your main.rs
file:
extern crate dtt;
use dtt::*;
then you can use the functions in your application code.
DTT
comes with a set of examples that you can use to get started. The examples are located in the examples
directory of the project. To run the examples, clone the repository and run the following command in your terminal from the project root directory.
cargo run --example dtt
For transparency into our release cycle and in striving to maintain backward compatibility, DTT
follows semantic versioning.
The project is licensed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0).
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
A big thank you to all the awesome contributors of Mini Functions for their help and support. A special thank you goes to the
Rust Reddit community for providing a lot of useful suggestions on how to improve this project.