module Netdate:sig
..end
Support for common date/time parsing and formatting. Many routines refer to the epoch, which for Unix is 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970. Timestamps given as "seconds since the epoch" ignore leap seconds.
type
t = {
|
year : |
(* | complete year | *) |
|
month : |
(* | 1..12 | *) |
|
day : |
(* | 1..31 | *) |
|
hour : |
(* | 0..23 | *) |
|
minute : |
(* | 0..59 | *) |
|
second : |
(* | 0..60 (60=leapsecond) | *) |
|
nanos : |
(* | nanoseconds, new since Ocamlnet-3.5 | *) |
|
zone : |
(* | in minutes; 60 = UTC+0100 | *) |
|
week_day : |
(* | 0 = sunday; -1 if not given | *) |
val localzone : int
The offset in minutes for the local time zone from the UTC. This is the zone from the time when the program was started. For long-running programs, it is possible that the zone changes when daylight savings become effective or non-effective.
val localzone_nodst : int
Returns the offset for the local time zone for the case that daylight savings are not effective.
val get_localzone : unit -> int
Retrieves the current offset for the local time zone, taking daylight savings into account.
val create : ?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> ?nanos:int -> float -> t
Convert the time (seconds since the epoch) to a date/time record
The nanos
are added to the float as nanoseconds.
If zone
is set this zone is taken. Otherwise, if
localzone
is set, the local timezone is used that is valid
at the requested time. Otherwise, UTC is used.
Note that create ~localzone:true t
is different from
create ~zone:(get_localzone()) t
because the latter assumes
the timezone that is in effect when the function is called, and not
the timezone at the time t
.
type
localization = {
|
full_day_names : |
(* | Element | *) |
|
abbr_day_names : |
(* | Element | *) |
|
parsed_day_names : |
(* | Element | *) |
|
full_month_names : |
(* | Element | *) |
|
abbr_month_names : |
(* | Element | *) |
|
parsed_month_names : |
(* | Element | *) |
|
timezone_names : |
(* | A list of pairs | *) |
|
am_particle : |
(* | A particle for "AM" | *) |
|
pm_particle : |
(* | A particle for "PM" | *) |
|
d_format : |
(* | Format string for date according to the locale | *) |
|
t_format : |
(* | Format string for time according to the locale | *) |
|
d_t_format : |
(* | Format string for date and time according to the locale | *) |
|
t_format_ampm : |
(* | Format string for time, using am and pm, according to the locale | *) |
|
char_encoding : |
(* | The character encoding of this locale | *) |
type
compiled_localization
val posix_l9n : localization
The standard POSIX localization (English names)
val l9n_from_locale : string -> localization
Retrieves the localization from the passed locale (use "" for the standard locale). Timezone names are not provided by the locale
This function is not available on Windows (the POSIX localization is always returned).
val compile_l9n : localization -> compiled_localization
Preprocess the localization data for faster parsing and printing
val parse : ?localzone:bool ->
?zone:int -> ?l9n:compiled_localization -> string -> t
Parse a string and return a date/time record.
The following particles are recognized (by example):
1971/06/22
06/22/1971
1971-06-22
22-June-1971
22.06.1971
June 22, 1971
22 June 1971
06/22/71
22.06.71
71-06-22
22-June-71
June
, Jun
)Monday
, Mon
)14:55
14:55:28
14:55:28.6754
(the fractional part is not returned)T
UTC
, CET
, or Z
+01:00
, -01:00
, only following time+0100
, -0100
, only following timeYears must have 2 or 4 digits. 2-digit years >= 70 are interpreted
as 1900+x
. 2-digit years < 70 are interpreted as 2000+x
.
Support for 2-digit years will be removed in a future version
of Ocamlnet. (Support for 3-digit years is already removed in
Ocamlnet 3.0.)
The names of months and weekdays are recognized that are configured
with the l9n
argument. By default, English names are recognized.
A date must be given. Time, time zones, and weekdays are optional.
A missing time is reported as "00:00:00". A missing weekday is
reported by setting week_day=(-1)
. A missing time zone is
reported by setting zone
to the passed default (which is determined
from the zone
and localzone
arguments as for create
).
It is not checked whether the parsed numbers make sense (e.g. whether months are between 1 and 12).
Date/time strings as defined in RFC 3339 are supported since Ocamlnet 3.0.
val since_epoch : t -> float
Convert a date/time record into the time (seconds since the epoch), rounded down to the next integral number.
val since_epoch_timespec : t -> float * int
Returns the seconds since the epoch as pair (seconds,nanos)
val since_epoch_approx : t -> float
Same, but the nanos are added to the seconds. The precision of floats is not sufficient to represent this precisely, so the result is only an approximation.
val week_day : t -> int
Returns the week day. If the week_day
field is (-1) the week day
is computed.
val year_day : t -> int
Returns the year day (range 0 to 365)
val iso8601_week_pair : t -> int * int
Returns (week_number, year)
for the ISO-8601 definition of weeks.
The week starts with Monday, and has numbers 1-53. A week is considered
to be part of the year into which four or more days fall.
val parse_epoch : ?l9n:compiled_localization ->
?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> string -> float
Parse a string and return the time (integral seconds since the epoch)
val parse_epoch_timespec : ?l9n:compiled_localization ->
?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> string -> float * int
Parse a string and return the time (seconds and nanos since the epoch)
val parse_epoch_approx : ?l9n:compiled_localization ->
?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> string -> float
Parse a string and return the time (approximate seconds since the epoch)
val format_to : ?l9n:compiled_localization ->
Netchannels.out_obj_channel -> fmt:string -> t -> unit
Format a date/time record according to the format string and outputs the resulting string to the channel.
The format string consists of zero or more conversion specifications and ordinary characters. All ordinary characters are output directly to the channel. A conversion specification consists of the '%' character and one other character.
The conversion specifications are:
%A
: full weekday name.%a
: abbreviated weekday name.%B
: full month name.%b
: abbreviated month name.%C
: (year / 100) as an integer; single digits are preceded by a zero.%c
: the preferred date+time representation of l9n
%D
: equivalent to "%m/%d/%y"
.%d
: day of the month as an integer (01-31); single digits are
preceded by a zero.%e
: day of the month as an integer (1-31).%F
: equivalent to "%Y-%m-%d"
(ISO 8601)%G
: the year of the week according to the ISO-8601 week definition%g
: same as %G but uses a two-digit year%H
: hour (24-hour clock) as an integer (00-23).%h
: the same as %b.%I
: hour (12-hour clock) as an integer (01-12).%j
: day of the year as an integer (001-366).%k
: hour (24-hour clock) as an integer (0-23);
single digits are preceded by a blank.%l
: hour (12-hour clock) as an integer (1-12);
single digits are preceded by a blank.%M
: minute as an integer (00-59).%m
: month as an integer (01-12).%n
: a newline.%p
: "AM" or "PM" as defined in l9n
, in uppercase%P
: "am" or "pm" as defined in l9n
, in lowercase%R
: equivalent to "%H:%M"
.%r
: the time in am/pm notation according to l9n
%S
: second as an integer (00-60). This format accepts a precision
argument, e.g. %.3S
to print the second with three digits after the
dot.%s
: number of seconds since the epoch%T
: equivalent to "%H:%M:%S"
.%t
: a tab.%U
: week number of the year (Sunday as the first day
of the week) as an integer (00-53).%u
weekday (Monday as the first day of the week) as
an integer (1-7).%V
: week number of the year (ISO-8601 definition, use together with
%G
or %g
%W
: week number of the year (Monday as the first day
of the week) as an integer (00-53).%w
: weekday (Sunday as the first day of the week) as
an integer (0-6).%X
: representation of the time according to l9n
%x
: representation of the date according to l9n
%Y
: year with century as an integer.%y
: year without century as an integer (00-99).%z
: time zone offset from UTC; a leading plus sign
stands for east of UTC, a minus sign for west of UTC, hours and
minutes follow with two digits each and no delimiter between them
(common form for RFC 822 date headers).%Z
: same as %z
%:z
: time zone with colon, e.g. +05:00 (new since Ocamlnet 3)%%
: a `%' character.If l9n
is not passed, the default is the POSIX localization
(English names).
val format : ?l9n:compiled_localization -> fmt:string -> t -> string
Format a date/time record as a string
val mk_date : ?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> ?nanos:int -> fmt:string -> float -> string
Format the seconds (plus nanos if present) as a string
val mk_mail_date : ?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> float -> string
Convert the time (seconds since the epoch) to a date string that conforms to RFC 1123 (which updates RFC 822).
Example: "Sun, 06 Nov 1994 08:49:37 -0500"
.
val mk_usenet_date : ?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> float -> string
Convert the time (seconds since the epoch) to a date string that conforms to RFC 1036 (which obsoletes RFC 850).
Example: "Sunday, 06-Nov-94 08:49:37 -0500"
.
Note that this format has only two digits for the year.
val mk_internet_date : ?localzone:bool -> ?zone:int -> ?digits:int -> float -> string
Convert the time (seconds since the epoch) to a date string that
conforms to RFC 3339. This is the most modern format, and should
be used if permitted by the network protocol. Pass in digits
the
number of digits for the fractional part of seconds.
Example: "1996-12-19T16:39:57.89-08:00"
.