EDTF-Ruby comprises a parser and an API implementation of the Extended Date/Time Format standard.
EDTF-Ruby parser implements all levels and features of the EDTF specification (version September 16, 2011). With the following known caveats:
- In the latest revision of the EDTF specification alternative versions of partial uncertain/approximate strings were introduced (with or without nested parentheses); EDTF-Ruby currently uses the version that tries to reduce parentheses for printing as we find that one easier to read; the parser accepts all valid dates using this approach, plus some dates using nested expressions (the parser will not accept some of the more complex examples, though).
EDTF-Ruby has been confirmed to work on the following Ruby implementations: 2.1, 2.0, 1.9.3, Rubinius, and JRuby (1.8.7 and 1.9.2 were originally supported but we are not testing compatibility actively anymore). Active Support's date extensions are currently listed as a dependency, because of many functional overlaps (version 3.x and 4.x are supported).
A variation of EDTF will part of the upcoming ISO 8601-2 standard. EDTF-Ruby does not support this new version of EDTF yet, but if you are curious, EDTF.js, an ES6 implementation is already available.
EDTF Ruby is implemented as an extension to the regular Ruby date/time classes.
You can parse EDTF strings either using Date.edtf
or EDTF.parse
(both methods come with an alternative bang! version, that will raise an error
if the string cannot be parsed instead of silently returning nil); if
given a valid EDTF string the return value will either be an (extended) Date
,
EDTF::Interval
, EDTF::Set
, EDTF::Epoch
or EDTF::Season
instance.
Given any of these instances, you can print the corresponding EDTF string
using the #edtf
method.
Most of the EDTF features deal with dates; EDTF-Ruby implements these by extending Active Support's version of the regular Ruby Date class. The library intends to be transparent to Ruby's regular API, i.e., every Date instance should act as you would normally expect but provides additional functionality.
Most, notably, EDTF dates come in day, month, or year precision. This is a subtle difference that determines how many other methods work. For instance:
> Date.today.precision
=> :day
> Date.today
=> Thu, 10 Nov 2011
> Date.today.succ
=> Fri, 11 Nov 2011
> Date.today.month_precision!.succ
=> Sat, 10 Dec 2011
As you can see, dates have day precision by default; after setting the date's precision to month, however, the natural successor is not the next day, but a day a month from now. Always keep precision in mind when comparing dates, too:
> Date.new(1966).year_precision! == Date.new(1966)
=> false
The year 1966 is not equal to the January 1st, 1966. You can set a date's precision directly, or else use the dedicated bang! methods:
> d = Date.new(1993)
> d.day_precision? # -> true
> d.edtf
=> "1993-01-01"
> d.month_precision!
> d.edtf
=> "1993-01"
> d.year_precision!
> d.edtf
=> "1993"
> d.day_precision? # -> false
> d.year_precision? # -> true
In the examples above, you also see that the #edtf
method will print a
different string depending on the date's current precision.
The second important extension is that dates can be uncertain and or approximate. The distinction between the two may seem somewhat contrived, but we have come to understand it as follows:
Assume you take a history exam and have to answer one of those dreaded questions that require you to say exactly in what year a certain event happened; you studied hard, but all of a sudden you are uncertain: was that the year 1683 or was it 1638? This is what uncertainty is in the parlance of EDTF: in fact, you would write it just like that "1638?".
Approximate dates are similar but slightly different. Lets say you want to tell a story about something that happened to you one winter; you don't recall the exact date, but you know it must have been sometime between Christmas and New Year's. Come to think of it, you don't remember the year either, but you must have been around ten years old. Using EDTF, you could write something like "1993~-12-(27)~": this indicates that both the year and the day are approximations: perhaps the day is not the 27th but it is somewhere close.
This is the main difference between uncertain and approximate in EDTF (in our opinion at least): approximate always means close to the actual number, whilst uncertain could be something completely different (just as there is a large temporal distance between 1638 and 1683).
Here are a few examples of how you can access the uncertain/approximate state of dates in Ruby:
> d = Date.edtf('1984?')
> d.uncertain?
=> true
> d.uncertain? :year
=> true
> d.uncertain? :day
=> false
> d.approximate!
> d.edtf
=> "1984?~"
> d.month_precision!
> d.approximate! :month
> d.edtf
=> "1984?-01~"
As you can see above, you can use the bang! methods to set individual date parts.
In addition, EDTF supports unspecified date parts. EDTF-Ruby provides parsing for both the draft and finalized EDTF specifications, with output meeting the requirements of the final specification:
> d = Date.edtf('1999-03-XX')
> d.unspecified?
=> true
> d.unspecified? :year
=> false
> d.unspecified? :day
=> true
> d.unspecified! :month
> d.edtf
=> "1999-XX-XX"
> draft_d = Date.edtf('1999-03-uu')
> draft_d.edtf
=> "1999-03-XX"
All three, uncertain, approximate, and unspecified attributes do not factor into date calculations (like comparisons or successors etc.).
EDTF long or scientific years are mapped to normal date instances.
> Date.edtf('y-17e7').year
=> -170000000
When printing date strings, EDTF-Ruby will try to avoid nested parentheses:
> Date.edtf("(1999-(02)~-23)?").edtf
=> "1999?-(02)?~-23?"
If you parse an EDTF interval, the EDTF-Ruby parser will return an instance
of EDTF::Interval
; intervals mimic regular Ruby ranges, but offer additional
functionality.
> d = Date.edtf('1984-06?/2004-08?')
> d.from.uncertain?
=> true
> d.include?(Date.new(1987,04,13))
=> false
The day is not included because interval has month precision. However:
> d.cover?(Date.new(1987,04,13))
=> true
The day is still covered by the interval. In general, optimized in the same way that Ruby optimizes numeric ranges. Additionally, precision plays into the way intervals are enumerated:
> d.length
=> 243
There are 243 months between 1984-06-01 and 2004-08-31.
> d.step(36).map(&:year)
=> [1984, 1987, 1990, 1993, 1996, 1999, 2002]
Here we iterate through the interval in 36-month steps and map each date to the year.
> Date.edtf('1582-10-01/1582-10-31').length
=> 21
This interval has day precision, so 21 is the number of days in October 1582, which was cut short because of the Gregorian calendar reform.
Intervals can be open or have unknown start or end dates.
> Date.edtf('2004/open').open?
=> true
> Date.edtf('2004/open').cover?(Date.today)
=> true
EDTF supports two kind of sets: choice lists (meaning one date out of a list),
or inclusive lists. In EDTF-Ruby, these are covered by the class EDTF::Set
and the choice
attribute.
> s = Date.edtf('{1667,1668, 1670..1672}')
> s.choice?
=> false
> s.choice!
> s.edtf
=> "[1667,1668,1670..1672]"
As you can see above, EDTF-Ruby remembers which parts of the set were specified as a range; ranges are however enumerated for membership tests:
> s.include?(Date.edtf('1669'))
=> false
> s.include?(Date.edtf('1671'))
=> true
Even though we're still aware that the year 1671 was is not directly an element of the set:
> s.length
=> 3
When in doubt, you can always map the set to an array. This will also enumerate all ranges:
> s.map(&:year)
=> [1667,1668,1670,1671,1672] # when enumerated there are 5 elements
EDTF sets also feature an #earlier?
and #later?
attribute:
> s.earlier?
=> false
> s.earlier!
> s.edtf
=> "[..1667,1668,1670..1672]"
The EDTF specification supports so called masked precision strings to define decades or centuries. EDTF-Ruby maps these to dedicated intervals which always cover 10 or 100 years, respectively.
> d = Date.edtf!('196x')
=> 196x
> d.class
=> EDTF::Decade
> d.class
=> EDTF::Decade
> d.min
=> Fri, 01 Jan 1960
> d.max
=> Wed, 31 Dec 1969
> d.map(&:year)
=> [1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969]
Finally, EDTF covers seasons. Again, EDTF-Ruby provides a dedicated class for this. Note that EDTF does not make any assumption about the specifics (which months etc.) of the season and you don't have to either; however EDTF-Ruby defines method aliases which allow you to access the seasons by the names spring, summer, autumn (or fall), and winter, respectively. You can also use the more neutral taxonomy of first, second, third, fourth.
> w = Date.edtf!('2003-24')
> w.winter?
=> true
> s = w.succ
> s.spring?
=> true
> s.year
=> 2004
> s.min
=> Mon, 01 Mar 2004
> s.max
=> Mon, 31 May 2004
> s.to_a.length
=> 92
005:0> w.to_a.length
=> 91
As you can see, spring 2004 lasted one day longer than winter 2003 (note that spring and winter here do not relate to the astronomical seasons but strictly to three month periods).
Of course you can print seasons to EDTF strings, too. Finally, seasons can be uncertain/approximate.
> s.edtf
=> "2004-21"
> s.approximate!.edtf
=> "2004-21"
For additional features, please take a look at the documentation or the extensive list of rspec examples.
The EDTF-Ruby source code is hosted on GitHub. You can check out a copy of the latest code using Git:
$ git clone https://github.com/inukshuk/edtf-ruby.git
To get started, generate the parser and run all tests:
$ cd edtf-ruby
$ bundle install
$ bundle exec rspec spec
$ bundle exec cucumber
If you've found a bug or have a question, please open an issue on the EDTF-Ruby issue tracker. Or, for extra credit, clone the EDTF-Ruby repository, write a failing example, fix the bug and submit a pull request.
EDTF-Ruby was written by Sylvester Keil and Ilja Srna.
Published under the terms and conditions of the FreeBSD License; see LICENSE for details.