A date and time library for Clojure, wrapping the Joda Time library. DEPRECATED
The Joda Time website says:
Note that from Java SE 8 onwards, users are asked to migrate to java.time (JSR-310) - a core part of the JDK which replaces this project.
If you are using Java 8 or later, please use the built-in Java Time instead of Joda Time -- or look at clojure.java-time if you want a Clojure wrapper for that, or cljc.java-time for a thin Clojure(Script) wrapper, or juxt/tick for another cross-platform option. See Converting from Joda Time to java.time for more details about the similarities and differences between the two libraries.
clj-time
artifacts are released to Clojars.
If you are using Maven, add the following repository definition to your pom.xml
:
<repository>
<id>clojars.org</id>
<url>http://clojars.org/repo</url>
</repository>
With Leiningen:
[clj-time "0.15.2"]
With Maven:
<dependency>
<groupId>clj-time</groupId>
<artifactId>clj-time</artifactId>
<version>0.15.2</version>
</dependency>
Please open issues against the official clj-time repo on Github. clj-time
is a very thin wrapper around Joda Time. That means that if Joda Time has a "peculiar behavior", it's likely to be surfaced directly in clj-time
as well. A good example of this is clj-time.format/unparse
which simply calls Joda Time's .print
method -- and if the date passed in happens to be nil
, you silently get back the current date/time (many people would expect an exception!).
Please ask questions on the clj-time mailing list.
The main namespace for date-time operations in the clj-time
library is clj-time.core
.
(require '[clj-time.core :as t])
Create a DateTime instance with date-time, specifying the year, month, day, hour, minute, second, and millisecond:
(t/date-time 1986 10 14 4 3 27 456)
=> #<DateTime 1986-10-14T04:03:27.456Z>
Less-significant fields can be omitted:
(t/date-time 1986 10 14)
=> #<DateTime 1986-10-14T00:00:00.000Z>
Get the current time with now
and the start of the Unix epoch with
epoch
.
Once you have a date-time, use accessors like hour
and second
to
access the corresponding fields:
(t/hour (t/date-time 1986 10 14 22))
=> 22
The date-time constructor always returns times in the UTC time
zone. If you want a time with the specified fields in a different time
zone, use from-time-zone
:
(t/from-time-zone (t/date-time 1986 10 22) (t/time-zone-for-offset -2))
=> #<DateTime 1986-10-22T00:00:00.000-02:00>
If on the other hand you want a given absolute instant in time in a
different time zone, use to-time-zone
:
(t/to-time-zone (t/date-time 1986 10 22) (t/time-zone-for-offset -2))
=> #<DateTime 1986-10-21T22:00:00.000-02:00>
In addition to time-zone-for-offset
, you can use the
time-zone-for-id
and default-time-zone
functions and the utc
Var
to construct or get DateTimeZone
instances.
If you only want a date with no time component, consider using the
local-date
and today
functions. These return LocalDate
instances
that do not have time components (and thus don't suffer from
timezone-related shifting).
(t/local-date 2013 3 20)
=> #<LocalDate 2013-03-20>
The functions equal?
, after?
, and before?
determine the relative position
of two DateTime instances:
(t/equal? (t/date-time 1986 10) (t/date-time 1986 10))
=> true
(t/after? (t/date-time 1986 10) (t/date-time 1986 9))
=> true
(t/before? (t/date-time 1986 9) (t/date-time 1986 10))
=> true
Often you will want to find a date some amount of time from a given date. For example, to find the time 1 month and 3 weeks from a given date-time:
(t/plus (t/date-time 1986 10 14) (t/months 1) (t/weeks 3))
=> #<DateTime 1986-12-05T00:00:00.000Z>
You can perform also minus
operations
(t/minus (t/date-time 1986 10 14 6) (t/hours 2))
=> #<DateTime 1986-10-14T04:00:00.000Z>
An Interval
is used to represent the span of time between two
DateTime
instances. Construct one using interval
, then query them
using within?
, overlaps?
, and abuts?
(t/within? (t/interval (t/date-time 1986) (t/date-time 1990))
(t/date-time 1987))
=> true
The in-seconds
and in-minutes
functions can be used to describe
intervals in the corresponding temporal units:
(t/in-minutes (t/interval (t/date-time 1986 10 2) (t/date-time 1986 10 14)))
=> 17280
The overlap
function can be used to get an Interval
representing the
overlap between two intervals:
(t/overlap (t/interval (t/date-time 1986) (t/date-time 1990))
(t/interval (t/date-time 1987) (t/date-time 1991)))
=> #<Interval 1987-01-01T00:00:00.000Z/1990-01-01T00:00:00.000Z>
today-at
returns a moment in time at the given hour,
minute and second on the current date UTC; not the current system date:
(t/today-at 12 00)
=> #<DateTime 2013-03-29T12:00:00.000Z>
(t/today-at 12 00 05)
=> #<DateTime 2013-03-29T12:00:05.000Z>
;; System clock says 11PM on 12/20/2016 UTC-5
(t/today-at 7 00 00)
=> #<DateTime 2016-12-21T7:00:00.000Z>
If you need to parse or print date-times, use clj-time.format
:
(require '[clj-time.format :as f])
Parsing and printing are controlled by formatters. You can either use one of the built in ISO8601 formatters or define your own, e.g.:
(def built-in-formatter (f/formatters :basic-date-time))
(def custom-formatter (f/formatter "yyyyMMdd"))
To see a list of available built-in formatters and an example of a date-time printed in their format:
(f/show-formatters)
Remember that mm
is minutes, MM
is months, ss
is seconds and
SS
is milliseconds. You can find a complete list of patterns
on the Joda Time website.
Once you have a formatter, parsing and printing are straightforward:
(f/parse custom-formatter "20100311")
=> #<DateTime 2010-03-11T00:00:00.000Z>
(f/unparse custom-formatter (t/date-time 2010 10 3))
=> "20101003"
To parse dates in multiple formats and format dates in just one format, you can do this:
(def multi-parser (f/formatter (t/default-time-zone) "YYYY-MM-dd" "YYYY/MM/dd"))
(f/unparse multi-parser (f/parse multi-parser "2012-02-01"))
=> "2012-02-01"
(f/unparse multi-parser (f/parse multi-parser "2012/02/01"))
=> "2012-02-01"
Note: Joda Time's .print
method accepts a null date/time object and substitutes the current date/time, so (f/unparse my-fmt nil)
will not throw an exception -- it will just silently return the current date/time!
The namespace clj-time.coerce
contains utility functions for
coercing Joda DateTime
instances to and from various other types:
(require '[clj-time.coerce :as c])
For example, to convert a Joda DateTime
to and from a Java long
:
(c/to-long (t/date-time 1998 4 25))
=> 893462400000
(c/from-long 893462400000)
=> #<DateTime 1998-04-25T00:00:00.000Z>
And by the magic of protocols you can pass in an isoformat string and get the unix epoch milliseconds:
(c/to-long "2013-08-01")
=> 1375315200000
There are also conversions to and from java.util.Date
(to-date
and
from-date
), java.sql.Date
(to-sql-date
and from-sql-date
),
java.sql.Timestamp
(to-sql-time
and from-sql-time
) and several
other types.
To support serialization to the ubiquitous
EDN format,
pr
, prn
etc. will serialize Joda DateTime
in a tagged-literal format,
that clojure.edn/read
will deserialize. There is a data_readers.clj
file, or if not loaded a data-readers
var to use with clojure.edn
.
(pr-str (t/date-time 1998 4 25))
=> "#clj-time/date-time \"1998-04-25T00:00:00.000Z\""
(require '[clojure.edn :as edn])
=> nil
(def x (edn/read-string {:readers c/data-readers}
(pr-str (t/date-time 1998 4 25))))
(type x)
=> org.joda.time.DateTime
x
=> #clj-time/date-time "1998-04-25T00:00:00.000Z"
The namespace clj-time.local
contains functions for working with
local time without having to shift to/from utc, the preferred time
zone of clj-time.core.
(require '[clj-time.local :as l])
Get the current local time with
(l/local-now)
Get a local date-time instance retaining the time fields with
(l/to-local-date-time obj)
The following all return 1986-10-14 04:03:27.246 with the local time zone.
(l/to-local-date-time (clj-time.core/date-time 1986 10 14 4 3 27 246))
(l/to-local-date-time "1986-10-14T04:03:27.246")
(l/to-local-date-time "1986-10-14T04:03:27.246Z")
The dynamic var *local-formatters*
contains a map of local
formatters for parsing and printing. It is initialized with all the
formatters in clj-time.format localized.
to-local-date-time for strings uses *local-formatters*
to parse.
Format an obj using a formatter in *local-formatters*
corresponding
to the format-key passed in with
(l/format-local-time (l/local-now) :basic-date-time)
clj-time.periodic/periodic-seq
returns an infinite sequence of instants
separated by a time period starting with the given point in time:
(require '[clj-time.periodic :as p])
(require '[clj-time.core :as t])
;; returns 10 instants starting with current time separated
;; by 12 hours
(take 10 (p/periodic-seq (t/now) (t/hours 12)))
In particular, if you ask for a sequence of instants separated by a month, you will get dates where the month increases each time (rather than being, say, 30 days apart).
clj-time.predicates
comes with a set of handy predicates to
check for common conditions. For instance:
(require '[clj-time.core :as t])
(require '[clj-time.predicates :as pr])
(pr/monday? (t/date-time 1999 9 9))
=> false
(pr/january? (t/date-time 2011 1 1))
=> true
(pr/weekend? (t/date-time 2014 1 26))
=> true
(pr/weekday? (t/date-time 2014 1 26))
=> false
(pr/last-day-of-month? (t/date-time 2014 1 26))
=> false
(pr/first-day-of-month? (t/date-time 2014 1 26))
=> false
clj-time.jdbc
registers protocol extensions so you don’t have to use
clj-time.coerce
yourself to coerce to and from SQL timestamps.
From the REPL:
(require 'clj-time.jdbc)
In your project:
(ns my.neat.project
(:require [clj-time.jdbc]))
; They're registered and ready to use.
Now you can use org.joda.time.DateTime
objects when "writing" to the database
in place of java.sql.Timestamp
objects, and expect org.joda.time.DateTime
objects when "reading" where you would have previously expected
java.sql.Timestamp
objects.
Running the tests:
$ rm -f test/readme.clj && lein test-all
(assumes Leiningen 2.x)
The complete API documentation is also available (codox generated).
Released under the MIT License: https://github.com/clj-time/clj-time/blob/master/MIT-LICENSE.txt