A Time-like class that can represent a time in any time zone. Necessary
because standard Ruby Time instances are limited
to UTC and the system's ENV['TZ']
zone.
You shouldn't ever need to create a TimeWithZone instance directly via
new
. Instead use methods local
,
parse
, at
and now
on TimeZone instances, and in_time_zone
on Time and DateTime instances.
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
Time.zone.local(2007, 2, 10, 15, 30, 45) # => Sat, 10 Feb 2007 15:30:45 EST -05:00
Time.zone.parse('2007-02-10 15:30:45') # => Sat, 10 Feb 2007 15:30:45 EST -05:00
Time.zone.at(1171139445) # => Sat, 10 Feb 2007 15:30:45 EST -05:00
Time.zone.now # => Sun, 18 May 2008 13:07:55 EDT -04:00
Time.utc(2007, 2, 10, 20, 30, 45).in_time_zone # => Sat, 10 Feb 2007 15:30:45 EST -05:00
See Time and TimeZone for further documentation of these methods.
TimeWithZone instances implement the same API as Ruby Time instances, so that Time and TimeWithZone instances are interchangeable.
t = Time.zone.now # => Sun, 18 May 2008 13:27:25 EDT -04:00
t.hour # => 13
t.dst? # => true
t.utc_offset # => -14400
t.zone # => "EDT"
t.to_s(:rfc822) # => "Sun, 18 May 2008 13:27:25 -0400"
t + 1.day # => Mon, 19 May 2008 13:27:25 EDT -04:00
t.beginning_of_year # => Tue, 01 Jan 2008 00:00:00 EST -05:00
t > Time.utc(1999) # => true
t.is_a?(Time) # => true
t.is_a?(ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone) # => true
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- Comparable
- DateAndTime::Compatibility
PRECISIONS | = | Hash.new { |h, n| h[n] = "%FT%T.%#{n}N".freeze } |
[R] | time_zone |
Report class name as 'Time' to thwart type checking.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/time_with_zone.rb, line 50 def initialize(utc_time, time_zone, local_time = nil, period = nil) @utc = utc_time ? transfer_time_values_to_utc_constructor(utc_time) : nil @time_zone, @time = time_zone, local_time @period = @utc ? period : get_period_and_ensure_valid_local_time(period) end
Adds an interval of time to the current object's time and returns that value as a new TimeWithZone object.
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
now = Time.zone.now # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EDT -04:00
now + 1000 # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:43:08 EDT -04:00
If we're adding a Duration of variable length (i.e., years, months, days), move forward from time, otherwise move forward from utc, for accuracy when moving across DST boundaries.
For instance, a time + 24.hours will advance exactly 24 hours, while a time + 1.day will advance 23-25 hours, depending on the day.
now + 24.hours # => Mon, 03 Nov 2014 00:26:28 EST -05:00
now + 1.day # => Mon, 03 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EST -05:00
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/time_with_zone.rb, line 274 def +(other) if duration_of_variable_length?(other) method_missing(:+, other) else result = utc.acts_like?(:date) ? utc.since(other) : utc + other rescue utc.since(other) result.in_time_zone(time_zone) end end
Returns a new TimeWithZone object that
represents the difference between the current object's time and the
other
time.
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
now = Time.zone.now # => Mon, 03 Nov 2014 00:26:28 EST -05:00
now - 1000 # => Mon, 03 Nov 2014 00:09:48 EST -05:00
If subtracting a Duration of variable length (i.e., years, months, days), move backward from time, otherwise move backward from utc, for accuracy when moving across DST boundaries.
For instance, a time - 24.hours will go subtract exactly 24 hours, while a time - 1.day will subtract 23-25 hours, depending on the day.
now - 24.hours # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EDT -04:00
now - 1.day # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 00:26:28 EDT -04:00
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/time_with_zone.rb, line 301 def -(other) if other.acts_like?(:time) to_time - other.to_time elsif duration_of_variable_length?(other) method_missing(:-, other) else result = utc.acts_like?(:date) ? utc.ago(other) : utc - other rescue utc.ago(other) result.in_time_zone(time_zone) end end
Use the time in UTC for comparisons.
So that self
acts_like?(:time)
.
Uses Date to provide precise Time calculations for years, months, and days according to the proleptic Gregorian calendar. The result is returned as a new TimeWithZone object.
The options
parameter takes a hash with any of these keys:
:years
, :months
, :weeks
,
:days
, :hours
, :minutes
,
:seconds
.
If advancing by a value of variable length (i.e., years, weeks, months, days), move forward from time, otherwise move forward from utc, for accuracy when moving across DST boundaries.
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
now = Time.zone.now # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EDT -04:00
now.advance(seconds: 1) # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:26:29 EDT -04:00
now.advance(minutes: 1) # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:27:28 EDT -04:00
now.advance(hours: 1) # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EST -05:00
now.advance(days: 1) # => Mon, 03 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EST -05:00
now.advance(weeks: 1) # => Sun, 09 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EST -05:00
now.advance(months: 1) # => Tue, 02 Dec 2014 01:26:28 EST -05:00
now.advance(years: 1) # => Mon, 02 Nov 2015 01:26:28 EST -05:00
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/time_with_zone.rb, line 354 def advance(options) # If we're advancing a value of variable length (i.e., years, weeks, months, days), advance from #time, # otherwise advance from #utc, for accuracy when moving across DST boundaries if options.values_at(:years, :weeks, :months, :days).any? method_missing(:advance, options) else utc.advance(options).in_time_zone(time_zone) end end
Subtracts an interval of time from the current object's time and returns the result as a new TimeWithZone object.
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
now = Time.zone.now # => Mon, 03 Nov 2014 00:26:28 EST -05:00
now.ago(1000) # => Mon, 03 Nov 2014 00:09:48 EST -05:00
If we're subtracting a Duration of variable length (i.e., years, months, days), move backward from time, otherwise move backward from utc, for accuracy when moving across DST boundaries.
For instance, time.ago(24.hours)
will move back exactly 24
hours, while time.ago(1.day)
will move back 23-25 hours,
depending on the day.
now.ago(24.hours) # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 01:26:28 EDT -04:00
now.ago(1.day) # => Sun, 02 Nov 2014 00:26:28 EDT -04:00
Coerces time to a string for JSON encoding. The
default format is ISO 8601. You can get %Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S +offset style by
setting
ActiveSupport::JSON::Encoding.use_standard_json_time_format
to
false
.
# With ActiveSupport::JSON::Encoding.use_standard_json_time_format = true
Time.utc(2005,2,1,15,15,10).in_time_zone("Hawaii").to_json
# => "2005-02-01T05:15:10.000-10:00"
# With ActiveSupport::JSON::Encoding.use_standard_json_time_format = false
Time.utc(2005,2,1,15,15,10).in_time_zone("Hawaii").to_json
# => "2005/02/01 05:15:10 -1000"
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/time_with_zone.rb, line 165 def as_json(options = nil) if ActiveSupport::JSON::Encoding.use_standard_json_time_format xmlschema(ActiveSupport::JSON::Encoding.time_precision) else %Q(#{time.strftime("%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S")} #{formatted_offset(false)}) end end
Returns true if the current object's time is within the specified
min
and max
time.
An instance of ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone is never blank
Returns true if the current time is within Daylight Savings Time for the specified time zone.
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
Time.zone.parse("2012-5-30").dst? # => true
Time.zone.parse("2012-11-30").dst? # => false
Returns true
if other
is equal to current object.
Returns a formatted string of the offset from UTC, or an alternative string if the time zone is already UTC.
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => "Eastern Time (US & Canada)"
Time.zone.now.formatted_offset(true) # => "-05:00"
Time.zone.now.formatted_offset(false) # => "-0500"
Time.zone = 'UTC' # => "UTC"
Time.zone.now.formatted_offset(true, "0") # => "0"
Returns true if the current object's time is in the future.
Returns a string of the object's date and time in the format used by HTTP requests.
Time.zone.now.httpdate # => "Tue, 01 Jan 2013 04:39:43 GMT"
Returns the simultaneous time in Time.zone
, or the specified
zone.
Returns a string of the object's date, time, zone, and offset from UTC.
Time.zone.now.inspect # => "Thu, 04 Dec 2014 11:00:25 EST -05:00"
Returns a Time
instance of the simultaneous time in the system
timezone.
Send the missing method to time
instance, and wrap result in a
new TimeWithZone with the existing
time_zone
.
Returns true if the current object's time is in the past.
Returns the underlying TZInfo::TimezonePeriod.
respond_to_missing? is not called in some cases, such as when type conversion is performed with Kernel#String
Ensure proxy class responds to all methods that underlying time instance responds to.
Returns a string of the object's date and time in the RFC 2822 standard format.
Time.zone.now.rfc2822 # => "Tue, 01 Jan 2013 04:51:39 +0000"
Replaces %Z
directive with +zone before passing to
Time#strftime, so that zone information is correct.
Returns a Time
instance that represents the time in
time_zone
.
Returns an instance of DateTime with the timezone's UTC offset
Time.zone.now.to_datetime # => Tue, 18 Aug 2015 02:32:20 +0000
Time.current.in_time_zone('Hawaii').to_datetime # => Mon, 17 Aug 2015 16:32:20 -1000
Returns the object's date and time as a floating point number of seconds since the Epoch (January 1, 1970 00:00 UTC).
Time.zone.now.to_f # => 1417709320.285418
Returns the object's date and time as an integer number of seconds since the Epoch (January 1, 1970 00:00 UTC).
Time.zone.now.to_i # => 1417709320
Returns the object's date and time as a rational number of seconds since the Epoch (January 1, 1970 00:00 UTC).
Time.zone.now.to_r # => (708854548642709/500000)
Returns a string of the object's date and time. Accepts an optional
format
:
-
:default
- default value, mimics Ruby Time#to_s format. -
:db
- format outputs time in UTC :db time. See Time#to_formatted_s(:db). -
Any key in
Time::DATE_FORMATS
can be used. See active_support/core_ext/time/conversions.rb.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/time_with_zone.rb, line 204 def to_s(format = :default) if format == :db utc.to_s(format) elsif formatter = ::Time::DATE_FORMATS[format] formatter.respond_to?(:call) ? formatter.call(self).to_s : strftime(formatter) else "#{time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")} #{formatted_offset(false, 'UTC')}" # mimicking Ruby Time#to_s format end end
Returns an instance of Time
, either with the same UTC offset
as self
or in the local system timezone depending on the
setting of ActiveSupport.to_time_preserves_timezone
.
Returns true if the current object's time falls within the current day.
Returns a Time
instance of the simultaneous time in the UTC
timezone.
Returns true if the current time zone is set to UTC.
Time.zone = 'UTC' # => 'UTC'
Time.zone.now.utc? # => true
Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' # => 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
Time.zone.now.utc? # => false
Returns the offset from current time to UTC time in seconds.
Returns a string of the object's date and time in the ISO 8601 standard format.
Time.zone.now.xmlschema # => "2014-12-04T11:02:37-05:00"