diff --git a/ext/date/date_core.c b/ext/date/date_core.c index 1c0d1c4..6610b18 100644 --- a/ext/date/date_core.c +++ b/ext/date/date_core.c @@ -4505,6 +4505,9 @@ date_s__parse_internal(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * Note: * This method recognizes many forms in +string+, * but it is not a validator. + * For formats, see + * {"Specialized Format Strings" in Formats for Dates and Times}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-Specialized+Format+Strings] + * * If +string+ does not specify a valid date, * the result is unpredictable; * consider using Date._strptime instead. @@ -4537,6 +4540,8 @@ date_s__parse(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * Note: * This method recognizes many forms in +string+, * but it is not a validator. + * For formats, see + * {"Specialized Format Strings" in Formats for Dates and Times}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-Specialized+Format+Strings] * If +string+ does not specify a valid date, * the result is unpredictable; * consider using Date._strptime instead. @@ -4671,7 +4676,7 @@ date_s_iso8601(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * Date._rfc3339(string, limit: 128) -> hash * * Returns a hash of values parsed from +string+, which should be a valid - * {RFC 3339 format}[https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3339]: + * {RFC 3339 format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-RFC+3339+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) * s = d.rfc3339 # => "2001-02-03T00:00:00+00:00" @@ -4699,7 +4704,7 @@ date_s__rfc3339(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * * Returns a new \Date object with values parsed from +string+, * which should be a valid - * {RFC 3339 format}[https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3339]: + * {RFC 3339 format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-RFC+3339+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) * s = d.rfc3339 # => "2001-02-03T00:00:00+00:00" @@ -4811,7 +4816,7 @@ date_s_xmlschema(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * Date._rfc2822(string, limit: 128) -> hash * * Returns a hash of values parsed from +string+, which should be a valid - * {RFC 2822 date format}[https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2822]: + * {RFC 2822 date format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-RFC+2822+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) * s = d.rfc2822 # => "Sat, 3 Feb 2001 00:00:00 +0000" @@ -4841,7 +4846,7 @@ date_s__rfc2822(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * * Returns a new \Date object with values parsed from +string+, * which should be a valid - * {RFC 2822 date format}[https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2822]: + * {RFC 2822 date format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-RFC+2822+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) * s = d.rfc2822 # => "Sat, 3 Feb 2001 00:00:00 +0000" @@ -4885,7 +4890,7 @@ date_s_rfc2822(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * Date._httpdate(string, limit: 128) -> hash * * Returns a hash of values parsed from +string+, which should be a valid - * HTTP date format: + * {HTTP date format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-HTTP+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) * s = d.httpdate # => "Sat, 03 Feb 2001 00:00:00 GMT" @@ -4911,7 +4916,7 @@ date_s__httpdate(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * * Returns a new \Date object with values parsed from +string+, * which should be a valid - * {RFC 2616 date format}[https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2616]: + * {HTTP date format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-HTTP+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) s = d.httpdate # => "Sat, 03 Feb 2001 00:00:00 GMT" @@ -4953,7 +4958,7 @@ date_s_httpdate(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * Date._jisx0301(string, limit: 128) -> hash * * Returns a hash of values parsed from +string+, which should be a valid - * JIS X 0301 date format: + * {JIS X 0301 date format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-JIS+X+0301+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) * s = d.jisx0301 # => "H13.02.03" @@ -4979,7 +4984,7 @@ date_s__jisx0301(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE klass) * Date.jisx0301(string = '-4712-01-01', start = Date::ITALY, limit: 128) -> date * * Returns a new \Date object with values parsed from +string+, - * which should be a valid JIS X 0301 format: + * which should be a valid {JIS X 0301 format}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-JIS+X+0301+Format]: * * d = Date.new(2001, 2, 3) * s = d.jisx0301 # => "H13.02.03" @@ -9378,151 +9383,65 @@ Init_date_core(void) negative_inf = -INFINITY; /* - * date and datetime class - Tadayoshi Funaba 1998-2011 - * - * 'date' provides two classes: Date and DateTime. - * - * == Terms and Definitions - * - * Some terms and definitions are based on ISO 8601 and JIS X 0301. - * - * === Calendar Date - * - * The calendar date is a particular day of a calendar year, - * identified by its ordinal number within a calendar month within - * that year. + * \Class \Date provides methods for storing and manipulating + * calendar dates. * - * In those classes, this is so-called "civil". + * Consider using + * {class Time}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/Time.html] + * instead of class \Date if: * - * === Ordinal Date + * - You need both dates and times; \Date handles only dates. + * - You need only Gregorian dates (and not Julian dates); + * see {Julian and Gregorian Calendars}[rdoc-ref:calendars.rdoc]. * - * The ordinal date is a particular day of a calendar year identified - * by its ordinal number within the year. + * A \Date object, once created, is immutable, and cannot be modified. * - * In those classes, this is so-called "ordinal". + * == Creating a \Date * - * === Week Date + * You can create a date for the current date, using Date.today: * - * The week date is a date identified by calendar week and day numbers. + * Date.today # => # * - * The calendar week is a seven day period within a calendar year, - * starting on a Monday and identified by its ordinal number within - * the year; the first calendar week of the year is the one that - * includes the first Thursday of that year. In the Gregorian - * calendar, this is equivalent to the week which includes January 4. + * You can create a specific date from various combinations of arguments: * - * In those classes, this is so-called "commercial". + * - Date.new takes integer year, month, and day-of-month: * - * === Julian Day Number + * Date.new(1999, 12, 31) # => # * - * The Julian day number is in elapsed days since noon (Greenwich Mean - * Time) on January 1, 4713 BCE (in the Julian calendar). + * - Date.ordinal takes integer year and day-of-year: * - * In this document, the astronomical Julian day number is the same as - * the original Julian day number. And the chronological Julian day - * number is a variation of the Julian day number. Its days begin at - * midnight on local time. + * Date.ordinal(1999, 365) # => # * - * In this document, when the term "Julian day number" simply appears, - * it just refers to "chronological Julian day number", not the - * original. + * - Date.jd takes integer Julian day: * - * In those classes, those are so-called "ajd" and "jd". + * Date.jd(2451544) # => # * - * === Modified Julian Day Number + * - Date.commercial takes integer commercial data (year, week, day-of-week): * - * The modified Julian day number is in elapsed days since midnight - * (Coordinated Universal Time) on November 17, 1858 CE (in the - * Gregorian calendar). + * Date.commercial(1999, 52, 5) # => # * - * In this document, the astronomical modified Julian day number is - * the same as the original modified Julian day number. And the - * chronological modified Julian day number is a variation of the - * modified Julian day number. Its days begin at midnight on local - * time. + * - Date.parse takes a string, which it parses heuristically: * - * In this document, when the term "modified Julian day number" simply - * appears, it just refers to "chronological modified Julian day - * number", not the original. + * Date.parse('1999-12-31') # => # + * Date.parse('31-12-1999') # => # + * Date.parse('1999-365') # => # + * Date.parse('1999-W52-5') # => # * - * In those classes, those are so-called "amjd" and "mjd". - * - * == Date - * - * A subclass of Object that includes the Comparable module and - * easily handles date. - * - * A Date object is created with Date::new, Date::jd, Date::ordinal, - * Date::commercial, Date::parse, Date::strptime, Date::today, - * Time#to_date, etc. - * - * require 'date' + * - Date.strptime takes a date string and a format string, + * then parses the date string according to the format string: * - * Date.new(2001,2,3) - * #=> # - * Date.jd(2451944) - * #=> # - * Date.ordinal(2001,34) - * #=> # - * Date.commercial(2001,5,6) - * #=> # - * Date.parse('2001-02-03') - * #=> # - * Date.strptime('03-02-2001', '%d-%m-%Y') - * #=> # - * Time.new(2001,2,3).to_date - * #=> # + * Date.strptime('1999-12-31', '%Y-%m-%d') # => # + * Date.strptime('31-12-1999', '%d-%m-%Y') # => # + * Date.strptime('1999-365', '%Y-%j') # => # + * Date.strptime('1999-W52-5', '%G-W%V-%u') # => # + * Date.strptime('1999 52 5', '%Y %U %w') # => # + * Date.strptime('1999 52 5', '%Y %W %u') # => # + * Date.strptime('fri31dec99', '%a%d%b%y') # => # * - * All date objects are immutable; hence cannot modify themselves. + * See also the specialized methods in + * {"Specialized Format Strings" in Formats for Dates and Times}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/strftime_formatting_rdoc.html#label-Specialized+Format+Strings] * - * The concept of a date object can be represented as a tuple - * of the day count, the offset and the day of calendar reform. - * - * The day count denotes the absolute position of a temporal - * dimension. The offset is relative adjustment, which determines - * decoded local time with the day count. The day of calendar - * reform denotes the start day of the new style. The old style - * of the West is the Julian calendar which was adopted by - * Caesar. The new style is the Gregorian calendar, which is the - * current civil calendar of many countries. - * - * The day count is virtually the astronomical Julian day number. - * The offset in this class is usually zero, and cannot be - * specified directly. - * - * A Date object can be created with an optional argument, - * the day of calendar reform as a Julian day number, which - * should be 2298874 to 2426355 or negative/positive infinity. - * The default value is +Date::ITALY+ (2299161=1582-10-15). - * See also sample/cal.rb. - * - * $ ruby sample/cal.rb -c it 10 1582 - * October 1582 - * S M Tu W Th F S - * 1 2 3 4 15 16 - * 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 - * 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 - * 31 - * - * $ ruby sample/cal.rb -c gb 9 1752 - * September 1752 - * S M Tu W Th F S - * 1 2 14 15 16 - * 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 - * 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 - * - * A Date object has various methods. See each reference. - * - * d = Date.parse('3rd Feb 2001') - * #=> # - * d.year #=> 2001 - * d.mon #=> 2 - * d.mday #=> 3 - * d.wday #=> 6 - * d += 1 #=> # - * d.strftime('%a %d %b %Y') #=> "Sun 04 Feb 2001" - * - * === Argument +limit+ + * == Argument +limit+ * * Certain singleton methods in \Date that parse string arguments * also take optional keyword argument +limit+, @@ -9536,7 +9455,6 @@ Init_date_core(void) * - Other non-numeric: raises TypeError. * */ - cDate = rb_define_class("Date", rb_cObject); /* Exception for invalid date/time */