Date Time Formatter/Parser ObjectsDate Time Formatter/Parser Objects
Periods |
Date Generators |
Special Values |
Format Date Parser
PeriodsThe period_formatter and period_parser provide a uniform interface for the input and output of date_periods, time_periods, and in a future release, local_date_time_periods. The user has control over the delimiters, formats of the date/time components, and the form the period takes. The format of the date/time components is controlled via the date_time input and output facets.Period FormPeriods are constructed with open ranged parameters. The first value is the starting point, and is included in the period. The end value is not included but immediately follows the last value: [begin/end). However, a period can be streamed as either an open range or a closed range.[2003-Jan-01/2003-Dec-31] <-- period holding 365 days
[2003-Jan-01/2004-Jan-01) <-- period holding 365 daysDelimitersThere are four delimiters. The default values are"\" - separator"[" - start delimiter")" - open range end delimiter"]" - closed range end delimiterA user can provide a custom set of delimiters. Custom delimiters may contain spaces.CustomizationThe period form and delimiters can be set as construction parameters or by means of accessor functions. A custom period parser/formatter can then be used as a construction parameter to a new facet, or can be set in an existing facet via an accessor function.Period Formatter/Parser Reference
The complete class reference can be found here: Period Formatter Doxygen Reference and here: Period Parser Doxygen ReferencePeriod Formatter ConstructionSyntaxDescriptionperiod_formatter(...)
Parameters:
range_display_options
char_type*
char_type*
char_type*
char_type*NOTE: All five construction parameters have default values so this constructor also doubles as the default constructor. The range_display_options is a public type enum of the period_formatter class. The possible choices are AS_OPEN_RANGE or AS_CLOSED_RANGE. The closed range is the default. A period has three significant points: the begining, the last, and the end. A closed range period takes the form [begin,end), where an open range period takes the form [begin,last]. The four char_type* parameters are: the period separator, the start delimiter, the open range end delimiter, and the closed range end delimiter.Period Formatter AccessorsSyntaxDescriptionExamplerange_display_options range_option()Returns the current setting for the range display (either AS_OPEN_RANGE or AS_CLOSED_RANGE).void range_option(...)
Parameter:
range_display_optionsSets the option for range display (either AS_OPEN_RANGE or AS_CLOSED_RANGE).void delimiter_strings(...)
Parameters:
string_type
string_type
string_type
string_typeSet new delimiter strings in the formatter.string beg("->| ");
string sep(" || ");
string opn(" ->|");
string clo(" |<-");
pf.delimiter_strings(beg, sep,
opn, clo);put_period_start_delimeter(...)
Return Type:
OutItrT
Parameter:
OutItrTPuts the start delimiter into the stream at position pointed to by OutItrT parameter.put_period_sepatator(...)
Return Type:
OutItrT
Parameter:
OutItrTPuts the separator into the stream at position pointed to by OutItrT parameter.put_period_end_delimeter(...)
Return Type:
OutItrT
Parameter:
OutItrTPuts the end delimiter into the stream at position pointed to by OutItrT parameter.OutItrT put_period(...)
Parameters:
OutItrT
ios_base
char_type
period_type
facet_typePuts a period into the stream using the set values for delimiters, separator, and range display. The facet parameter is used to put the date (or time) objects of the period.Period Parser ConstructionSyntaxDescriptionperiod_parser(...)
Parameters:
period_range_option
char_type*
char_type*
char_type*
char_type*NOTE: All five construction parameters have default values so this constructor also doubles as the default constructor. The period_range_option is a public type enum of the period_parser class. The possible choices are AS_OPEN_RANGE or AS_CLOSED_RANGE. The closed range is the default. A period has three significant points: the begining, the last, and the end. A closed range period takes the form [begin,end), where an open range period takes the form [begin,last]. The four char_type* parameters are: the period separator, the start delimiter, the open range end delimiter, and the closed range end delimiter.period_parser(period_parser)Copy constructorPeriod Parser AccessorsSyntaxDescriptionExampleperiod_range_option range_option()Returns the current setting for the period range (either AS_OPEN_RANGE or AS_CLOSED_RANGE).void range_option(...)
Parameter:
period_range_option Sets the option for period range (either AS_OPEN_RANGE or AS_CLOSED_RANGE).void delimiter_strings(...)
Parameters:
string_type
string_type
string_type
string_typeSet new delimiter strings in the parser.string beg("->| ");
string sep(" || ");
string opn(" ->|");
string clo(" |<-");
pp.delimiter_strings(beg, sep,
opn, clo);collection_type delimiter_strings()Returns the set of delimiter strings currently held in the parser.period_type get_period(...)
Parameters:
stream_itr_type
stream_itr_type
ios_base
period_type
duration_type
facet_typeParses a period from the stream. The iterator parameters point to the begining and end of the stream. The duration_type is relevant to the period type, for example: A date_period would use days as a duration_type. The period will be parsed according to the formats and strings found in the facet parameter._____________________________________________________Date GeneratorsThe date_generator formatter and parser provide flexibility by allowing the user to use custom "phrase elements". These phrase elements are the "in-between" words in the date_generators. For example, in the date_generator "Second Monday of March", "Second" and "of" are the phrase elements, where "Monday" and "March" are the date elements. Customization of the date elements is done with the facet. The order of the date and phrase elements cannot be changed. When parsing, all elements of the date_generator phrase must parse correctly or an ios_base::failure exception will be thrown.CustomizationThe default "phrase_strings" are:
"first""second""third""fourth""fifth""last""before""after""of"
A custom set of phrase_strings must maintain this order of occurance (Ex: "1st", "2nd", "3rd", "4th", "5th", "last", "prior", "past", "in"). Examples using default phrase_strings and default facet formats for weekday & month: "first Tue of Mar"And using custom phrase_strings: "1st Tue in Mar"The custom set of phrase elements can be set as construction parameters or through an accessor function.A custom date_generator parser/formatter can then be used as a construction parameter to a new facet, or can be set in an existing facet via an accessor function.IMPORTANT NOTE: Prior to 1.33, partial_date was output as "1 Jan" with a single *or* double digit number for the day. The new behavior is to *always* place a double digit number for the day - "01 Jan".Date Generator Reference
The complete class references can be found here: Date Generator Formatter Doxygen Reference and here: Date Generator Parser Doxygen ReferenceDate Generator Formatter ConstructionSyntaxDescriptiondate_generator_formatter()Uses the default date generator elements.date_generator_formatter(...)
Parameters:
string_type first_element
string_type second_element
string_type third_element
string_type fourth_element
string_type fifth_element
string_type last_element
string_type before_element
string_type after_element
string_type of_elementConstructs a date_generator_formatter using the given element strings.Date Generator Formatter AccessorsSyntaxDescriptionExamplevoid elements(...)
Parameters:
collection_type
phrase_elementsReplace the current phrase elements with a collection of new ones. The phrase_elements parameter is an enum that indicates what the first element in the new collection is (defaults to first).// col is a collection holding
// "final", "prior", "following",
// and "in"
typedef date_generator_formatter dgf;
dgf formatter();
formatter.elements(col, dgf::last);
// complete elements in dgf are now:
"first", "second", "third",
"fourth", "fifth", "final",
"prior", "following", and "in"put_partial_date(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::OutItrT
Parameters:
OutItrT next
ios_base
char_type fill
partial_date
facet_typeA put function for partial_date. This is a templated function that takes a facet_type as a parameter.Put a partial_date => "dd Month".put_nth_kday(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::OutItrT
Parameters:
OutItrT next
ios_base
char_type fill
nth_kday_type
facet_typeA put function for nth_kday_type. This is a templated function that takes a facet_type as a parameter.Put an nth_day_of_the_week_in_month => "nth weekday of month".put_first_kday(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::OutItrT
Parameters:
OutItrT next
ios_base
char_type fill
first_kday_type
facet_typeA put function for first_kday_type. This is a templated function that takes a facet_type as a parameter.Put a first_day_of_the_week_in_month => "first weekday of month".put_last_kday(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::OutItrT
Parameters:
OutItrT next
ios_base
char_type fill
last_kday_type
facet_typeA put function for last_kday_type. This is a templated function that takes a facet_type as a parameter.Put a last_day_of_the_week_in_month => "last weekday of month".put_kday_before(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::OutItrT
Parameters:
OutItrT next
ios_base
char_type fill
kday_before_type
facet_typeA put function for kday_before_type. This is a templated function that takes a facet_type as a parameter.Put a first_day_of_the_week_before => "weekday before"put_kday_after(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::OutItrT
Parameters:
OutItrT next
ios_base
char_type fill
kday_after_type
facet_typeA put function for kday_after_type. This is a templated function that takes a facet_type as a parameter.Put a first_day_of_the_week_after => "weekday after".Date Generator Parser ConstructionSyntaxDescriptiondate_generator_parser()Uses the default date generator elements.date_generator_parser(...)
Parameter:
date_generator_parserCopy Constructordate_generator_parser(...)
Parameters:
string_type first_element
string_type second_element
string_type third_element
string_type fourth_element
string_type fifth_element
string_type last_element
string_type before_element
string_type after_element
string_type of_elementConstructs a date_generator_parser using the given element strings.Date Generator Parser AccessorsSyntaxDescriptionExamplevoid element_strings(...)
Parameter:
collection_typeReplace the set of date generator element string with a new set.void element_strings(...)
Parameters:
string_type first
string_type second
string_type third
string_type fourth
string_type fifth
string_type last
string_type before
string_type after
string_type ofReplace the set of date generator elements with new values.get_partial_date_type(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::partial_date_type
Parameters:
stream_itr_type next
stream_itr_type str_end
ios_base
facet_typeA templated function that parses a date_generator from the stream.Parses a partial_date => "dd Month".get_nth_kday_type(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::nth_kday_type
Parameters:
stream_itr_type next
stream_itr_type str_end
ios_base
facet_typeA templated function that parses a date_generator from the stream.Parses an nth_day_of_the_week_in_month => "nth weekday of month".get_first_kday_type(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::firat_kday_type
Parameters:
stream_itr_type next
stream_itr_type str_end
ios_base
facet_typeA templated function that parses a date_generator from the stream.Parses a first_day_of_the_week_in_month => "first weekday of month".get_last_kday_type(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::last_kday_type
Parameters:
stream_itr_type next
stream_itr_type str_end
ios_base
facet_typeA templated function that parses a date_generator from the stream.Parses a last_day_of_the_week_in_month => "last weekday of month".get_kday_before_type(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::kday_before_type
Parameters:
stream_itr_type next
stream_itr_type str_end
ios_base
facet_typeA templated function that parses a date_generator from the stream.Parses a first_day_of_the_week_before => "weekday before"get_kday_after_type(...)
Return Type:
facet_type::kday_after_type
Parameters:
stream_itr_type next
stream_itr_type str_end
ios_base
facet_typeA templated function that parses a date_generator from the stream.Parses a first_day_of_the_week_after => "weekday after"._____________________________________________________Special ValuesThe date_time library uses five special_values. They are:
not_a_date_timeneg_infinpos_infinmin_date_timemax_date_timeThe default set of strings used to represent these types are: "not-a-date-time", "-infinity", "+infinity", "minimum-date-time", "maximum-date-time". When output, the min_date-time and max_date_time appear as normal date/time representations: "1400-Jan-01" and "9999-Dec-31" repectively.CustomizationThe special values parser/formatter allows the user to set custom strings for these special values. These strings can be set as construction parameters to a new facet, or can be set in an existing facet via an accessor function.Special Values Formatter/Parser Reference
The complete class references can be found here: Special Values Formatter Doxygen Reference and here: Special Values Parser Doxygen ReferenceSpecial Values Formatter ConstructorSyntaxDescriptionspecial_values_formatter()Constructor uses defaults for special value strings.special_values_formatter(...)
Parameters:
collection_type::iterator
collection_type::iteratorConstructs using values in collection. NOTE: Only the first three strings of the collection will be used. Strings for minimum_date_time and maximum_date_time are ignored as those special values are output as normal dates/times.special_values_formatter(...)
Parameters:
char_type*
char_type*Constructs special values formatter from an array of strings.Special Values Formatter AccessorsSyntaxDescriptionExampleOutItrT put_special(...)
Parameters:
OutItrT next
special_values valuePuts the given special value into the stream.date d1(not_a_date_time);
date d2(minimum_date_time);
special_values_formatter formatter;
formatter.put_special(itr, d1);
// Puts: "not-a-date-time"
formatter.put_special(itr, d2);
// Puts: "1400-Jan-01"Special Values Parser ConstructorSyntaxDescriptionspecial_values_parser()special_values_parser(...)
Parameters:
collection_type::iterator
collection_type::iteratorConstructs a special values parser using the strings in the collection.special_values_parser(...)
Parameter:
scpecial_values_parserCopy constructor.special_values_parser(...)
Parameters:
string_type nadt_str
string_type neg_inf_str
string_type pos_inf_str
string_type min_dt_str
string_type max_dt_strConstructs a special values parser using the supplied strings.Special Values Parser AccessorsSyntaxDescriptionExamplevoid sv_strings(...)
Parameters:
string_type nadt_str
string_type neg_inf_str
string_type pos_inf_str
string_type min_dt_str
string_type max_dt_strReplace the set of special value strings with the given ones.bool match(...)
Parameters:
stream_itr_type beg
stream_itr_type end
match_resultsReturns true if parse was successful. Upon a successful parse, mr.current_match will be set an int values corresponding to the equivalent special_value.// stream holds "maximum_date_time"
typedef special_values_parser svp;
svp parser;
svp::match_results mr;
if(parser.match(itr, str_end, mr)) {
d = date(static_cast<special_values>(
mr.match_results))
} else {
// error, failed parse
}
// d == "9999-Dec-31"_____________________________________________________Format Date ParserThe format date parser is the object that holds the strings for months and weekday names, as well as their abbreviations. Custom sets of strings can be set at construction time, or, the strings in an existing format_date_parser can be replaced through accessor functions. Both the constructor and the accessor functions take a vector of strings as their arguments.Format Date Parser Reference
The complete class reference can be found here: Doxygen ReferenceFormat Date Parser ConstructorSyntaxDescriptionformat_date_parser(...)
Parameters:
string_type format
std::localeCreates a parser that uses the given format for parsing dates (in those functions where there is no format parameter). The names and abbreviations used are extracted from the given locale.format_date_parser(...)
Parameters:
string_type format
input_collection_type
input_collection_type
input_collection_type
input_collection_typeCreates a parser from using the given components. The input_collection_type parameters are for: short month names, long month names, short weekday names, and long weekday names (in that order). These collections must contain values for every month and every weekday (begining with January and Sunday).format_date_parser(...)
Parameters:
format_date_parserCopy ConstructorFormat Date Parser AccessorsSyntaxDescriptionExamplestring_type format()Returns the format that will be used when parsing dates in those functions where there is no format parameter.void format(string_type)Sets the format that will be used when parsing dates in those functions where there is no format parameter.void short_month_names(...)
Parameter:
input_collection_type namesReplace the short month names used by the parser. The collection must contain values for each month, starting with January.void long_month_names(...)
Parameter:
input_collection_type namesReplace the long month names used by the parser. The collection must contain values for each month, starting with January.void short_weekday_names(...)
Parameter:
input_collection_type namesReplace the short weekday names used by the parser. The collection must contain values for each weekday, starting with Sunday.void long_weekday_names(...)
Parameter:
input_collection_type namesReplace the long weekday names used by the parser. The collection must contain values for each weekday, starting with Sunday.date_type parse_date(...)
Parameters:
string_type input
string_type format
special_values_parserParse a date from the given input using the given format.string inp("2005-Apr-15");
string format("%Y-%b-%d");
date d;
d = parser.parse_date(inp,
format,
svp);
// d == 2005-Apr-15date_type parse_date(...)
Parameters:
istreambuf_iterator input
istreambuf_iterator str_end
special_values_parserParse a date from stream using the parser's format.date_type parse_date(...)
Parameters:
istreambuf_iterator input
istreambuf_iterator str_end
string_type format
special_values_parserParse a date from stream using the given format.// stream holds "2005-04-15"
string format("%Y-%m-%d");
date d;
d = parser.parse_date(itr,
str_end,
format,
svp);
// d == 2005-Apr-15month_type parse_month(...)
Parameters:
istreambuf_iterator input
istreambuf_iterator str_end
string_type formatParses a month from stream using given format. Throws bad_month if unable to parse.// stream holds "March"
string format("%B");
greg_month m;
m = parser.parse_month(itr,
str_end,
format);
// m == Marchday_type parse_day_of_month(...)
Parameters:
istreambuf_iterator input
istreambuf_iterator str_endParses a day_of_month from stream. The day must appear as a two digit number (01-31), or a bad_day_of_month will be thrown.// stream holds "01"
greg_day d;
d = parser.parse_day_of_month(itr,
str_end);
// d == 1stday_type parse_var_day_of_month(...)
Parameters:
istreambuf_iterator input
istreambuf_iterator str_endParses a day_of_month from stream. The day must appear as a one or two digit number (1-31), or a bad_day_of_month will be thrown.// stream holds "1"
greg_day d;
d = parser.parse_var_day_of_month(itr,
str_end);
// d == 1stday_of_week_type parse_weekday(...)
Parameters:
istreambuf_iterator input
istreambuf_iterator str_end
string_type formatParse a weekday from stream according to the given format. Throws a bad_weekday if unable to parse.// stream holds "Tue"
string format("%a");
greg_weekday wd;
wd = parser.parse_weekday(itr,
str_end,
format);
// wd == Tuesdayyear_type parse_year(...)
Parameters:
istreambuf_iterator input
istreambuf_iterator str_end
string_type formatParse a year from stream according to given format. Throws bad year if unable to parse.// stream holds "98"
string format("%y");
greg_year y;
y = parser.parse_year(itr,
str_end,
format);
// y == 1998