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class ActiveSupport::Duration
Provides accurate date and time measurements using Date#advance and Time#advance, respectively. It mainly supports the methods on Numeric.
1.month.ago # equivalent to Time.now.advance(months: -1)
Constants
- PARTS
- PARTS_IN_SECONDS
- SECONDS_PER_DAY
- SECONDS_PER_HOUR
- SECONDS_PER_MINUTE
- SECONDS_PER_MONTH
- SECONDS_PER_WEEK
- SECONDS_PER_YEAR
- VARIABLE_PARTS
Attributes
Public Class Methods
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 188
def build(value)
unless value.is_a?(::Numeric)
raise TypeError, "can't build an #{self.name} from a #{value.class.name}"
end
parts = {}
remainder_sign = value <=> 0
remainder = value.round(9).abs
variable = false
PARTS.each do |part|
unless part == :seconds
part_in_seconds = PARTS_IN_SECONDS[part]
parts[part] = remainder.div(part_in_seconds) * remainder_sign
remainder %= part_in_seconds
unless parts[part].zero?
variable ||= VARIABLE_PARTS.include?(part)
end
end
end unless value == 0
parts[:seconds] = remainder * remainder_sign
new(value, parts, variable)
end
Creates a new Duration from a seconds value that is converted to the individual parts:
ActiveSupport::Duration.build(31556952).parts # => {:years=>1}
ActiveSupport::Duration.build(2716146).parts # => {:months=>1, :days=>1}
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 143
def parse(iso8601duration)
parts = ISO8601Parser.new(iso8601duration).parse!
new(calculate_total_seconds(parts), parts)
end
Creates a new Duration from string formatted according to ISO 8601 Duration.
See ISO 8601 for more information. This method allows negative parts to be present in pattern. If invalid string is provided, it will raise ActiveSupport::Duration::ISO8601Parser::ParsingError.
Public Instance Methods
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 306
def %(other)
if Duration === other || Scalar === other
Duration.build(value % other.value)
elsif Numeric === other
Duration.build(value % other)
else
raise_type_error(other)
end
end
Returns the modulo of this Duration by another Duration or Numeric. Numeric values are treated as seconds.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 281
def *(other)
if Scalar === other || Duration === other
Duration.new(value * other.value, @parts.transform_values { |number| number * other.value }, @variable || other.variable?)
elsif Numeric === other
Duration.new(value * other, @parts.transform_values { |number| number * other }, @variable)
else
raise_type_error(other)
end
end
Multiplies this Duration by a Numeric and returns a new Duration.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 262
def +(other)
if Duration === other
parts = @parts.merge(other._parts) do |_key, value, other_value|
value + other_value
end
Duration.new(value + other.value, parts, @variable || other.variable?)
else
seconds = @parts.fetch(:seconds, 0) + other
Duration.new(value + other, @parts.merge(seconds: seconds), @variable)
end
end
Adds another Duration or a Numeric to this Duration. Numeric values are treated as seconds.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 292
def /(other)
if Scalar === other
Duration.new(value / other.value, @parts.transform_values { |number| number / other.value }, @variable)
elsif Duration === other
value / other.value
elsif Numeric === other
Duration.new(value / other, @parts.transform_values { |number| number / other }, @variable)
else
raise_type_error(other)
end
end
Divides this Duration by a Numeric and returns a new Duration.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 335
def ==(other)
if Duration === other
other.value == value
else
other == value
end
end
Returns true if other is also a Duration instance with the same value, or if other == value.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 420
def eql?(other)
Duration === other && other.value.eql?(value)
end
Returns true if other is also a Duration instance, which has the same parts as this one.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 424
def hash
@value.hash
end
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 393
def in_days
in_seconds / SECONDS_PER_DAY.to_f
end
Returns the amount of days a duration covers as a float
12.hours.in_days # => 0.5
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 386
def in_hours
in_seconds / SECONDS_PER_HOUR.to_f
end
Returns the amount of hours a duration covers as a float
1.day.in_hours # => 24.0
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 379
def in_minutes
in_seconds / SECONDS_PER_MINUTE.to_f
end
Returns the amount of minutes a duration covers as a float
1.day.in_minutes # => 1440.0
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 407
def in_months
in_seconds / SECONDS_PER_MONTH.to_f
end
Returns the amount of months a duration covers as a float
9.weeks.in_months # => 2.07
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 400
def in_weeks
in_seconds / SECONDS_PER_WEEK.to_f
end
Returns the amount of weeks a duration covers as a float
2.months.in_weeks # => 8.696
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 414
def in_years
in_seconds / SECONDS_PER_YEAR.to_f
end
Returns the amount of years a duration covers as a float
30.days.in_years # => 0.082
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 467
def iso8601(precision: nil)
ISO8601Serializer.new(self, precision: precision).serialize
end
Build ISO 8601 Duration string for this duration. The precision parameter can be used to limit seconds' precision of duration.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 235
def parts
@parts.dup
end
Returns a copy of the parts hash that defines the duration
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 371
def to_i
@value.to_i
end
Returns the number of seconds that this Duration represents.
1.minute.to_i # => 60
1.hour.to_i # => 3600
1.day.to_i # => 86400
Note that this conversion makes some assumptions about the duration of some periods, e.g. months are always 1/12 of year and years are 365.2425 days:
# equivalent to (1.year / 12).to_i
1.month.to_i # => 2629746
# equivalent to 365.2425.days.to_i
1.year.to_i # => 31556952
In such cases, Ruby's core Date and Time should be used for precision date and time arithmetic.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/duration.rb, line 347
def to_s
@value.to_s
end
Returns the amount of seconds a duration covers as a string. For more information check to_i method.
1.day.to_s # => "86400"
© 2004–2021 David Heinemeier Hansson
Licensed under the MIT License.