nfriend / amazon.date-normalizer

A JavaScript module that converts an AMAZON.DATE into a Moment.js object.

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AMAZON.DATE Normalizer

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A JavaScript module that converts an AMAZON.DATE into a Moment.js object.

Installation

This module is published to both npmjs.com and this project's GitLab's Package registry.

Installing from npmjs.com

yarn add @nfriend/amazon.date-normalizer

or:

npm install --save @nfriend/amazon.date-normalizer

Installing from the GitLab Package registry

Add the following to your project's .yarnrc:

"@nfriend:registry" "https://gitlab.com/api/v4/packages/npm/"

Or, if you're using npm, add this to .npmrc:

@nfriend:registry=https://gitlab.com/api/v4/packages/npm/

Then, install the package:

yarn add @nfriend/amazon.date-normalizer

or:

npm install --save @nfriend/amazon.date-normalizer

Usage

import { normalize } from '@nfriend/amazon.date-normalizer';

const amazonDateString = '2015-W49-WE';
const eventDate = normalize(amazonDateString);

// prints "2015-01-01"
console.log(eventDate.format('YYYY-MM-DD'));

For a complete list of all cases this module handles, see tests/index.test.ts.

Timezone

The returned moment object is always returned in UTC timezone.

No matter where the user is located, if they say "December 25th", this module will return an object like this:

const amazonDateString = '2015-12-25';
const eventDate = normalize(amazonDateString);

// prints "2015-12-25T00:00:00.000Z"
console.log(eventDate.toISOString());

Translating the date into the user's current timezone

To translate this date into the user's current timezone, use moment-timezone:

const upsServiceClient = handlerInput.serviceClientFactory.getUpsServiceClient();

deviceTimeZone = await upsServiceClient.getSystemTimeZone(
  handlerInput.requestEnvelope.context.System.device.deviceId,
);

// The second parameter causes the date to be _moved_ into the user's
// timezone, not just translated. So `translatedDate` will not refer
// to the same moment in time as `eventDate`.
const translatedDate = eventDate.clone().tz(deviceTimeZone, true);

const keepOffset = true;

// prints "2015-12-25T00:00:00.000-05:00"
console.log(translatedDate.toISOString(keepOffset));

Publishing

This project uses Semantic Release to manage releases, which happens in this project's GitLab pipeline.

To trigger a new release, add a new commit with a message like this:

fix: Put out all the fires

and git push on master.

Environment variables

The GitLab pipeline relies on a few environment variables:

Variable name Description
GITLAB_TOKEN The token used by Semantic Release to interact with the GitLab project
NPM_TOKEN The token used by Semantic Release to publish the package to NPM

About

A JavaScript module that converts an AMAZON.DATE into a Moment.js object.

License:MIT License


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