newm4n / go-dfe

Date format echange between golang date format and java date format. Its to help those who so accustomed with Java's simple date format.

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DateFormatExchange (DFE)

Get it

$ go get github.com/newm4n/go-dfe

About

Golang formats time.Time into string or parses a string back to time.Time using a speciffic date format. While the format it self resembles the actual date so you get the feeling on how it would look like, making these format can be some what un-intuitive.

Imagine if we have a date string of "February 21, 2018. At 21:32:12", And the format to parse this string is "January 02, 2006. At 15:04:05". It appears that January, 02, 2006, 15, 04, 05 is actually a sub pattern to recognize for their respected date element.

Date format in Golang

According to Golang time.Format() Code :

const (
	_                        = iota
	stdLongMonth             = iota + stdNeedDate  // "January"
	stdMonth                                       // "Jan"
	stdNumMonth                                    // "1"
	stdZeroMonth                                   // "01"
	stdLongWeekDay                                 // "Monday"
	stdWeekDay                                     // "Mon"
	stdDay                                         // "2"
	stdUnderDay                                    // "_2"
	stdZeroDay                                     // "02"
	stdHour                  = iota + stdNeedClock // "15"
	stdHour12                                      // "3"
	stdZeroHour12                                  // "03"
	stdMinute                                      // "4"
	stdZeroMinute                                  // "04"
	stdSecond                                      // "5"
	stdZeroSecond                                  // "05"
	stdLongYear              = iota + stdNeedDate  // "2006"
	stdYear                                        // "06"
	stdPM                    = iota + stdNeedClock // "PM"
	stdpm                                          // "pm"
	stdTZ                    = iota                // "MST"
	stdISO8601TZ                                   // "Z0700"  // prints Z for UTC
	stdISO8601SecondsTZ                            // "Z070000"
	stdISO8601ShortTZ                              // "Z07"
	stdISO8601ColonTZ                              // "Z07:00" // prints Z for UTC
	stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ                       // "Z07:00:00"
	stdNumTZ                                       // "-0700"  // always numeric
	stdNumSecondsTz                                // "-070000"
	stdNumShortTZ                                  // "-07"    // always numeric
	stdNumColonTZ                                  // "-07:00" // always numeric
	stdNumColonSecondsTZ                           // "-07:00:00"
	stdFracSecond0                                 // ".0", ".00", ... , trailing zeros included
	stdFracSecond9                                 // ".9", ".99", ..., trailing zeros omitted

	stdNeedDate  = 1 << 8             // need month, day, year
	stdNeedClock = 2 << 8             // need hour, minute, second
	stdArgShift  = 16                 // extra argument in high bits, above low stdArgShift
	stdMask      = 1<<stdArgShift - 1 // mask out argument
)

By looking to the above const snippet, you will understand how to create a date format in Go.

Date format in Java

Date format in Java have a more intuitive way to define date format.

According to SimpleDateFormat Java Doc :

Letter Date or Time Component Presentation Examples
G Era designator Text AD
y Year Year 1996; 96
Y Week year Year 2009; 09
M Month in year Month July; Jul; 07
w Week in year Number 27
W Week in month Number 2
D Day in year Number 189
d Day in month Number 10
F Day of week in month Number 2
E Day name in week Text Tuesday; Tue
u Day number of week (1 = Monday, ..., 7 = Sunday) Number 1
a Am/pm marker Text PM
H Hour in day (0-23) Number 0
k Hour in day (1-24) Number 24
K Hour in am/pm (0-11) Number 0
h Hour in am/pm (1-12) Number 12
m Minute in hour Number 30
s Second in minute Number 55
S Millisecond Number 978
z Time zone General time zone Pacific Standard Time; PST; GMT-08:00
Z Time zone RFC 822 time zone -0800
X Time zone ISO 8601 time zone -08; -0800; -08:00

How do we map date format in Golang and Java

Thus the following mapping can be created between golang and java date format.

Const Go Format Java Format
stdLongMonth January MMMM
stdMonth Jan MMM
stdNumMonth 1 M
stdZeroMonth 01 MM
stdLongWeekDay Monday EEEE
stdWeekDay Mon EEE
stdDay 2 d
stdUnderDay _2 n/a fallback to _d
stdZeroDay 02 dd
stdHour 15 HH
stdHour12 3 K
stdZeroHour12 03 KK
stdMinute 4 m
stdZeroMinute 04 mm
stdSecond 5 s
stdZeroSecond 05 ss
stdFracSecond9 999999999 SSS
stdLongYear 2006 yyyy
stdYear 06 yy
stdPM PM aa
stdpm pm n/a fallback to aa
stdTZ MST Z
stdISO8601TZ Z0700 'Z'XX
stdISO8601SecondsTZ Z070000 n/a fallback to 'Z'XX
stdISO8601ShortTZ Z07 'Z'X
stdISO8601ColonTZ Z07:00 'Z'XXX
stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ Z07:00:00 n/a fallback to 'Z'XXX
stdNumTZ -0700 XX
stdNumSecondsTz -070000 n/a fallback to 'Z'XX
stdNumShortTZ -07 X
stdNumColonTZ -07:00 XXX
stdNumColonSecondsTZ -07:00:00 n/a fallback to XXX

Usage

import (
	"github.com/newm4n/go-dfe"
	"time"
)

func FormatTime(t *time.Time) string {
	translation := DateFormatExchange.NewPatternTranslation()
	return t.Format(translation.JavaToGoFormat("dd MMMM yyyy HH:mm:ss"))
}

func ParseTime(date string) (*time.Time, error) {
	translation := DateFormatExchange.NewPatternTranslation()
	t, err := time.Parse(translation.JavaToGoFormat("dd MMMM yyyy HH:mm:ss"), date)
	if err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	return &t, err
}

About

Date format echange between golang date format and java date format. Its to help those who so accustomed with Java's simple date format.

License:Apache License 2.0


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