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1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 // Name: datetime.h
3 // Purpose: interface of wxDateTime
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // RCS-ID: $Id$
6 // Licence: wxWindows licence
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9 /**
10 @class wxDateTime
11
12 wxDateTime class represents an absolute moment in the time.
13
14 The type @c wxDateTime_t is typedefed as <tt>unsigned short</tt> and is
15 used to contain the number of years, hours, minutes, seconds and
16 milliseconds.
17
18 Global constant ::wxDefaultDateTime and synonym for it ::wxInvalidDateTime are
19 defined. This constant will be different from any valid wxDateTime object.
20
21
22 @section datetime_static Static Functions
23
24 All static functions either set or return the static variables of
25 wxDateSpan (the country), return the current moment, year, month or number
26 of days in it, or do some general calendar-related actions.
27
28 Please note that although several function accept an extra Calendar
29 parameter, it is currently ignored as only the Gregorian calendar is
30 supported. Future versions will support other calendars.
31
32 @beginWxPythonOnly
33 These methods are standalone functions named
34 "wxDateTime_<StaticMethodName>" in wxPython.
35 @endWxPythonOnly
36
37
38 @section datetime_formatting Date Formatting and Parsing
39
40 The date formatting and parsing functions convert wxDateTime objects to and
41 from text. The conversions to text are mostly trivial: you can either do it
42 using the default date and time representations for the current locale
43 (FormatDate() and FormatTime()), using the international standard
44 representation defined by ISO 8601 (FormatISODate(), FormatISOTime() and
45 FormatISOCombined()) or by specifying any format at all and using Format()
46 directly.
47
48 The conversions from text are more interesting, as there are much more
49 possibilities to care about. The simplest cases can be taken care of with
50 ParseFormat() which can parse any date in the given (rigid) format.
51 ParseRfc822Date() is another function for parsing dates in predefined
52 format -- the one of RFC 822 which (still...) defines the format of email
53 messages on the Internet. This format cannot be described with
54 @c strptime(3)-like format strings used by Format(), hence the need for a
55 separate function.
56
57 But the most interesting functions are ParseTime(), ParseDate() and
58 ParseDateTime(). They try to parse the date and time (or only one of them)
59 in 'free' format, i.e. allow them to be specified in any of possible ways.
60 These functions will usually be used to parse the (interactive) user input
61 which is not bound to be in any predefined format. As an example,
62 ParseDate() can parse the strings such as "tomorrow", "March first" and
63 even "next Sunday".
64
65 Finally notice that each of the parsing functions is available in several
66 overloads: if the input string is a narrow (@c char *) string, then a
67 narrow pointer is returned. If the input string is a wide string, a wide
68 char pointer is returned. Finally, if the input parameter is a wxString, a
69 narrow char pointer is also returned for backwards compatibility but there
70 is also an additional argument of wxString::const_iterator type in which,
71 if it is not @NULL, an iterator pointing to the end of the scanned string
72 part is returned.
73
74
75 @library{wxbase}
76 @category{data}
77
78 @stdobjects
79 - ::wxDefaultDateTime
80
81 @see @ref overview_datetime, wxTimeSpan, wxDateSpan, wxCalendarCtrl
82 */
83 class wxDateTime
84 {
85 public:
86 /**
87 A small unsigned integer type for storing things like minutes,
88 seconds &c. It should be at least short (i.e. not char) to contain
89 the number of milliseconds - it may also be 'int' because there is
90 no size penalty associated with it in our code, we don't store any
91 data in this format.
92 */
93 typedef unsigned short wxDateTime_t;
94
95
96 /**
97 Time zone symbolic names.
98 */
99 enum TZ
100 {
101 /// the time in the current time zone
102 Local,
103
104 //@{
105 /// zones from GMT (= Greenwich Mean Time): they're guaranteed to be
106 /// consequent numbers, so writing something like `GMT0 + offset' is
107 /// safe if abs(offset) <= 12
108
109 // underscore stands for minus
110 GMT_12, GMT_11, GMT_10, GMT_9, GMT_8, GMT_7,
111 GMT_6, GMT_5, GMT_4, GMT_3, GMT_2, GMT_1,
112 GMT0,
113 GMT1, GMT2, GMT3, GMT4, GMT5, GMT6,
114 GMT7, GMT8, GMT9, GMT10, GMT11, GMT12, GMT13,
115 // Note that GMT12 and GMT_12 are not the same: there is a difference
116 // of exactly one day between them
117 //@}
118
119 // some symbolic names for TZ
120
121 // Europe
122 WET = GMT0, //!< Western Europe Time
123 WEST = GMT1, //!< Western Europe Summer Time
124 CET = GMT1, //!< Central Europe Time
125 CEST = GMT2, //!< Central Europe Summer Time
126 EET = GMT2, //!< Eastern Europe Time
127 EEST = GMT3, //!< Eastern Europe Summer Time
128 MSK = GMT3, //!< Moscow Time
129 MSD = GMT4, //!< Moscow Summer Time
130
131 // US and Canada
132 AST = GMT_4, //!< Atlantic Standard Time
133 ADT = GMT_3, //!< Atlantic Daylight Time
134 EST = GMT_5, //!< Eastern Standard Time
135 EDT = GMT_4, //!< Eastern Daylight Saving Time
136 CST = GMT_6, //!< Central Standard Time
137 CDT = GMT_5, //!< Central Daylight Saving Time
138 MST = GMT_7, //!< Mountain Standard Time
139 MDT = GMT_6, //!< Mountain Daylight Saving Time
140 PST = GMT_8, //!< Pacific Standard Time
141 PDT = GMT_7, //!< Pacific Daylight Saving Time
142 HST = GMT_10, //!< Hawaiian Standard Time
143 AKST = GMT_9, //!< Alaska Standard Time
144 AKDT = GMT_8, //!< Alaska Daylight Saving Time
145
146 // Australia
147
148 A_WST = GMT8, //!< Western Standard Time
149 A_CST = GMT13 + 1, //!< Central Standard Time (+9.5)
150 A_EST = GMT10, //!< Eastern Standard Time
151 A_ESST = GMT11, //!< Eastern Summer Time
152
153 // New Zealand
154 NZST = GMT12, //!< Standard Time
155 NZDT = GMT13, //!< Daylight Saving Time
156
157 /// Universal Coordinated Time = the new and politically correct name
158 /// for GMT.
159 UTC = GMT0
160 };
161
162 /**
163 Several functions accept an extra parameter specifying the calendar to use
164 (although most of them only support now the Gregorian calendar). This
165 parameters is one of the following values.
166 */
167 enum Calendar
168 {
169 Gregorian, ///< calendar currently in use in Western countries
170 Julian ///< calendar in use since -45 until the 1582 (or later)
171 };
172
173 /**
174 Values corresponding to different dates of adoption of the Gregorian
175 calendar.
176
177 @see IsGregorianDate
178 */
179 enum GregorianAdoption
180 {
181 Gr_Unknown, ///< no data for this country or it's too uncertain to use
182 Gr_Standard, ///< on the day 0 of Gregorian calendar: 15 Oct 1582
183
184 Gr_Alaska, ///< Oct 1867 when Alaska became part of the USA
185 Gr_Albania, ///< Dec 1912
186
187 Gr_Austria = Gr_Unknown, ///< Different regions on different dates
188 Gr_Austria_Brixen, ///< 5 Oct 1583 -> 16 Oct 1583
189 Gr_Austria_Salzburg = Gr_Austria_Brixen,
190 Gr_Austria_Tyrol = Gr_Austria_Brixen,
191 Gr_Austria_Carinthia, ///< 14 Dec 1583 -> 25 Dec 1583
192 Gr_Austria_Styria = Gr_Austria_Carinthia,
193
194 Gr_Belgium, ///< Then part of the Netherlands
195
196 Gr_Bulgaria = Gr_Unknown, ///< Unknown precisely (from 1915 to 1920)
197 Gr_Bulgaria_1, ///< 18 Mar 1916 -> 1 Apr 1916
198 Gr_Bulgaria_2, ///< 31 Mar 1916 -> 14 Apr 1916
199 Gr_Bulgaria_3, ///< 3 Sep 1920 -> 17 Sep 1920
200
201 Gr_Canada = Gr_Unknown, ///< Different regions followed the changes in
202 ///< Great Britain or France
203
204 Gr_China = Gr_Unknown, ///< Different authorities say:
205 Gr_China_1, ///< 18 Dec 1911 -> 1 Jan 1912
206 Gr_China_2, ///< 18 Dec 1928 -> 1 Jan 1929
207
208 Gr_Czechoslovakia, ///< (Bohemia and Moravia) 6 Jan 1584 -> 17 Jan 1584
209 Gr_Denmark, ///< (including Norway) 18 Feb 1700 -> 1 Mar 1700
210 Gr_Egypt, ///< 1875
211 Gr_Estonia, ///< 1918
212 Gr_Finland, ///< Then part of Sweden
213
214 Gr_France, ///< 9 Dec 1582 -> 20 Dec 1582
215 Gr_France_Alsace, ///< 4 Feb 1682 -> 16 Feb 1682
216 Gr_France_Lorraine, ///< 16 Feb 1760 -> 28 Feb 1760
217 Gr_France_Strasbourg, ///< February 1682
218
219 Gr_Germany = Gr_Unknown, ///< Different states on different dates:
220 Gr_Germany_Catholic, ///< 1583-1585 (we take 1584)
221 Gr_Germany_Prussia, ///< 22 Aug 1610 -> 2 Sep 1610
222 Gr_Germany_Protestant, ///< 18 Feb 1700 -> 1 Mar 1700
223
224 Gr_GreatBritain, ///< 2 Sep 1752 -> 14 Sep 1752 (use 'cal(1)')
225
226 Gr_Greece, ///< 9 Mar 1924 -> 23 Mar 1924
227 Gr_Hungary, ///< 21 Oct 1587 -> 1 Nov 1587
228 Gr_Ireland = Gr_GreatBritain,
229 Gr_Italy = Gr_Standard,
230
231 Gr_Japan = Gr_Unknown, ///< Different authorities say:
232 Gr_Japan_1, ///< 19 Dec 1872 -> 1 Jan 1873
233 Gr_Japan_2, ///< 19 Dec 1892 -> 1 Jan 1893
234 Gr_Japan_3, ///< 18 Dec 1918 -> 1 Jan 1919
235
236 Gr_Latvia, ///< 1915-1918 (we take 1915)
237 Gr_Lithuania, ///< 1915
238 Gr_Luxemburg, ///< 14 Dec 1582 -> 25 Dec 1582
239 Gr_Netherlands = Gr_Belgium, ///< (including Belgium) 1 Jan 1583
240
241 /**
242 Special case of Groningen.
243
244 The Gregorian calendar was introduced twice in Groningen, first
245 time 28 Feb 1583 was followed by 11 Mar 1583, then it has gone back
246 to Julian in the summer of 1584 and then 13 Dec 1700 was followed
247 by 12 Jan 1701 -- which is the date we take into account here.
248 */
249 Gr_Netherlands_Groningen, ///< 13 Dec 1700 -> 12 Jan 1701
250 Gr_Netherlands_Gelderland, ///< 30 Jun 1700 -> 12 Jul 1700
251 Gr_Netherlands_Utrecht, ///< (and Overijssel) 30 Nov 1700->12 Dec 1700
252 Gr_Netherlands_Friesland, ///< (and Drenthe) 31 Dec 1700 -> 12 Jan 1701
253
254 Gr_Norway = Gr_Denmark, ///< Then part of Denmark
255 Gr_Poland = Gr_Standard,
256 Gr_Portugal = Gr_Standard,
257 Gr_Romania, ///< 31 Mar 1919 -> 14 Apr 1919
258 Gr_Russia, ///< 31 Jan 1918 -> 14 Feb 1918
259 Gr_Scotland = Gr_GreatBritain,
260 Gr_Spain = Gr_Standard,
261
262 /**
263 Special case of Sweden.
264
265 Sweden has a curious history. Sweden decided to make a gradual
266 change from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar. By dropping every
267 leap year from 1700 through 1740 the eleven superfluous days would
268 be omitted and from 1 Mar 1740 they would be in sync with the
269 Gregorian calendar. (But in the meantime they would be in sync with
270 nobody!)
271
272 So 1700 (which should have been a leap year in the Julian calendar)
273 was not a leap year in Sweden. However, by mistake 1704 and 1708
274 became leap years. This left Sweden out of synchronisation with
275 both the Julian and the Gregorian world, so they decided to go back
276 to the Julian calendar. In order to do this, they inserted an extra
277 day in 1712, making that year a double leap year! So in 1712,
278 February had 30 days in Sweden.
279
280 Later, in 1753, Sweden changed to the Gregorian calendar by
281 dropping 11 days like everyone else and this is what we use here.
282 */
283 Gr_Sweden = Gr_Finland, ///< 17 Feb 1753 -> 1 Mar 1753
284
285 Gr_Switzerland = Gr_Unknown,///< Different cantons used different dates
286 Gr_Switzerland_Catholic, ///< 1583, 1584 or 1597 (we take 1584)
287 Gr_Switzerland_Protestant, ///< 31 Dec 1700 -> 12 Jan 1701
288
289 Gr_Turkey, ///< 1 Jan 1927
290 Gr_USA = Gr_GreatBritain,
291 Gr_Wales = Gr_GreatBritain,
292 Gr_Yugoslavia ///< 1919
293 };
294
295 /**
296 Date calculations often depend on the country and wxDateTime allows to set
297 the country whose conventions should be used using SetCountry(). It takes
298 one of the following values as parameter.
299 */
300 enum Country
301 {
302 Country_Unknown, ///< no special information for this country
303 Country_Default, ///< set the default country with SetCountry() method
304 ///< or use the default country with any other
305
306 Country_WesternEurope_Start,
307 Country_EEC = Country_WesternEurope_Start,
308 France,
309 Germany,
310 UK,
311 Country_WesternEurope_End = UK,
312
313 Russia,
314
315 USA
316 };
317
318 /// symbolic names for the months
319 enum Month
320 {
321 Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec,
322
323 /// Invalid month value.
324 Inv_Month
325 };
326
327 /// symbolic names for the weekdays
328 enum WeekDay
329 {
330 Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat,
331
332 /// Invalid week day value.
333 Inv_WeekDay
334 };
335
336 /// invalid value for the year
337 enum Year
338 {
339 Inv_Year = SHRT_MIN // should hold in wxDateTime_t
340 };
341
342 /**
343 Flags to be used with GetMonthName() and GetWeekDayName() functions.
344 */
345 enum NameFlags
346 {
347 Name_Full = 0x01, ///< return full name
348 Name_Abbr = 0x02 ///< return abbreviated name
349 };
350
351 /**
352 Different parts of the world use different conventions for the week start.
353 In some countries, the week starts on Sunday, while in others -- on Monday.
354 The ISO standard doesn't address this issue, so we support both conventions
355 in the functions whose result depends on it (GetWeekOfYear() and
356 GetWeekOfMonth()).
357
358 The desired behaviour may be specified by giving one of the following
359 constants as argument to these functions.
360 */
361 enum WeekFlags
362 {
363 Default_First, ///< Sunday_First for US, Monday_First for the rest
364 Monday_First, ///< week starts with a Monday
365 Sunday_First ///< week starts with a Sunday
366 };
367
368
369 /**
370 Class representing a time zone.
371
372 The representation is simply the offset, in seconds, from UTC.
373 */
374 class WXDLLIMPEXP_BASE TimeZone
375 {
376 public:
377 /// Constructor for a named time zone.
378 TimeZone(TZ tz);
379
380 /// Constructor for the given offset in seconds.
381 TimeZone(long offset = 0);
382
383 /// Create a time zone with the given offset in seconds.
384 static TimeZone Make(long offset);
385
386 /// Return the offset of this time zone from UTC, in seconds.
387 long GetOffset() const;
388 };
389
390 /**
391 Contains broken down date-time representation.
392
393 This struct is analogous to standard C <code>struct tm</code> and uses
394 the same, not always immediately obvious, conventions for its members:
395 notably its mon and mday fields count from 0 while yday counts from 1.
396 */
397 struct Tm
398 {
399 wxDateTime_t msec, ///< Number of milliseconds.
400 sec, ///< Seconds in 0..59 (60 with leap seconds) range.
401 min, ///< Minutes in 0..59 range.
402 hour, ///< Hours since midnight in 0..23 range.
403 mday, ///< Day of the month in 1..31 range.
404 yday; ///< Day of the year in 0..365 range.
405 Month mon; ///< Month, as an enumerated constant.
406 int year; ///< Year.
407
408 /**
409 Check if the given date/time is valid (in Gregorian calendar).
410
411 Return @false if the components don't correspond to a correct date.
412 */
413 bool IsValid() const;
414
415 /**
416 Return the week day corresponding to this date.
417
418 Unlike the other fields, the week day is not always available and
419 so must be accessed using this method as it is computed on demand
420 when it is called.
421 */
422 WeekDay GetWeekDay();
423 };
424
425
426 /**
427 @name Constructors, Assignment Operators and Setters
428
429 Constructors and various Set() methods are collected here. If you
430 construct a date object from separate values for day, month and year,
431 you should use IsValid() method to check that the values were correct
432 as constructors cannot return an error code.
433 */
434 //@{
435
436 /**
437 Default constructor. Use one of the Set() functions to initialize the
438 object later.
439 */
440 wxDateTime();
441 /**
442 Same as Set().
443
444 @beginWxPythonOnly
445 This constructor is named "wxDateTimeFromTimeT" in wxPython.
446 @endWxPythonOnly
447 */
448 wxDateTime(time_t timet);
449 /**
450 Same as Set().
451
452 @beginWxPythonOnly Unsupported. @endWxPythonOnly
453 */
454 wxDateTime(const struct tm& tm);
455 /**
456 Same as Set().
457
458 @beginWxPythonOnly
459 This constructor is named "wxDateTimeFromJDN" in wxPython.
460 @endWxPythonOnly
461 */
462 wxDateTime(double jdn);
463 /**
464 Same as Set().
465
466 @beginWxPythonOnly
467 This constructor is named "wxDateTimeFromHMS" in wxPython.
468 @endWxPythonOnly
469 */
470 wxDateTime(wxDateTime_t hour, wxDateTime_t minute = 0,
471 wxDateTime_t second = 0, wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
472 /**
473 Same as Set().
474
475 @beginWxPythonOnly
476 This constructor is named "wxDateTimeFromDMY" in wxPython.
477 @endWxPythonOnly
478 */
479 wxDateTime(wxDateTime_t day, Month month = Inv_Month,
480 int year = Inv_Year, wxDateTime_t hour = 0,
481 wxDateTime_t minute = 0, wxDateTime_t second = 0,
482 wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
483
484 /**
485 Same as SetFromMSWSysTime.
486
487 @param st
488 Input, Windows SYSTEMTIME reference
489 @since 2.9.0
490 @remarks MSW only
491 @onlyfor{wxmsw}
492 */
493 wxDateTime(const struct _SYSTEMTIME& st);
494
495
496 /**
497 Reset time to midnight (00:00:00) without changing the date.
498 */
499 wxDateTime& ResetTime();
500
501 /**
502 Constructs the object from @a timet value holding the number of seconds
503 since Jan 1, 1970.
504
505 @beginWxPythonOnly
506 This method is named "SetTimeT" in wxPython.
507 @endWxPythonOnly
508 */
509 wxDateTime& Set(time_t timet);
510 /**
511 Sets the date and time from the broken down representation in the
512 standard @a tm structure.
513
514 @beginWxPythonOnly Unsupported. @endWxPythonOnly
515 */
516 wxDateTime& Set(const struct tm& tm);
517 /**
518 Sets the date from the so-called Julian Day Number.
519
520 By definition, the Julian Day Number, usually abbreviated as JDN, of a
521 particular instant is the fractional number of days since 12 hours
522 Universal Coordinated Time (Greenwich mean noon) on January 1 of the
523 year -4712 in the Julian proleptic calendar.
524
525 @beginWxPythonOnly
526 This method is named "SetJDN" in wxPython.
527 @endWxPythonOnly
528 */
529 wxDateTime& Set(double jdn);
530 /**
531 Sets the date to be equal to Today() and the time from supplied
532 parameters.
533
534 @beginWxPythonOnly
535 This method is named "SetHMS" in wxPython.
536 @endWxPythonOnly
537 */
538 wxDateTime& Set(wxDateTime_t hour, wxDateTime_t minute = 0,
539 wxDateTime_t second = 0, wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
540 /**
541 Sets the date and time from the parameters.
542 */
543 wxDateTime& Set(wxDateTime_t day, Month month = Inv_Month,
544 int year = Inv_Year, wxDateTime_t hour = 0,
545 wxDateTime_t minute = 0, wxDateTime_t second = 0,
546 wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
547
548 /**
549 Sets the day without changing other date components.
550 */
551 wxDateTime& SetDay(unsigned short day);
552
553 /**
554 Sets the date from the date and time in DOS format.
555 */
556 wxDateTime& SetFromDOS(unsigned long ddt);
557
558 /**
559 Sets the hour without changing other date components.
560 */
561 wxDateTime& SetHour(unsigned short hour);
562
563 /**
564 Sets the millisecond without changing other date components.
565 */
566 wxDateTime& SetMillisecond(unsigned short millisecond);
567
568 /**
569 Sets the minute without changing other date components.
570 */
571 wxDateTime& SetMinute(unsigned short minute);
572
573 /**
574 Sets the month without changing other date components.
575 */
576 wxDateTime& SetMonth(Month month);
577
578 /**
579 Sets the second without changing other date components.
580 */
581 wxDateTime& SetSecond(unsigned short second);
582
583 /**
584 Sets the date and time of to the current values. Same as assigning the
585 result of Now() to this object.
586 */
587 wxDateTime& SetToCurrent();
588
589 /**
590 Sets the year without changing other date components.
591 */
592 wxDateTime& SetYear(int year);
593
594 /**
595 Same as Set().
596 */
597 wxDateTime& operator=(time_t timet);
598 /**
599 Same as Set().
600 */
601 wxDateTime& operator=(const struct tm& tm);
602
603 //@}
604
605
606
607 /**
608 @name Accessors
609
610 Here are the trivial accessors. Other functions, which might have to
611 perform some more complicated calculations to find the answer are under
612 the "Date Arithmetics" section.
613 */
614 //@{
615
616 /**
617 Returns the date and time in DOS format.
618 */
619 long unsigned int GetAsDOS() const;
620
621 /**
622 Initialize using the Windows SYSTEMTIME structure.
623 @param st
624 Input, Windows SYSTEMTIME reference
625 @since 2.9.0
626 @remarks MSW only
627 @onlyfor{wxmsw}
628 */
629 wxDateTime& SetFromMSWSysTime(const struct _SYSTEMTIME& st);
630
631 /**
632 Returns the date and time in the Windows SYSTEMTIME format.
633 @param st
634 Output, pointer to Windows SYSTEMTIME
635 @since 2.9.0
636 @remarks MSW only
637 @onlyfor{wxmsw}
638 */
639 void GetAsMSWSysTime(struct _SYSTEMTIME* st) const;
640
641 /**
642 Returns the century of this date.
643 */
644 int GetCentury(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
645
646 /**
647 Returns the object having the same date component as this one but time
648 of 00:00:00.
649
650 @since 2.8.2
651
652 @see ResetTime()
653 */
654 wxDateTime GetDateOnly() const;
655
656 /**
657 Returns the day in the given timezone (local one by default).
658 */
659 short unsigned int GetDay(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
660
661 /**
662 Returns the day of the year (in 1-366 range) in the given timezone
663 (local one by default).
664 */
665 short unsigned int GetDayOfYear(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
666
667 /**
668 Returns the hour in the given timezone (local one by default).
669 */
670 short unsigned int GetHour(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
671
672 /**
673 Returns the milliseconds in the given timezone (local one by default).
674 */
675 short unsigned int GetMillisecond(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
676
677 /**
678 Returns the minute in the given timezone (local one by default).
679 */
680 short unsigned int GetMinute(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
681
682 /**
683 Returns the month in the given timezone (local one by default).
684 */
685 Month GetMonth(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
686
687 /**
688 Returns the seconds in the given timezone (local one by default).
689 */
690 short unsigned int GetSecond(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
691
692 /**
693 Returns the number of seconds since Jan 1, 1970. An assert failure will
694 occur if the date is not in the range covered by @c time_t type.
695 */
696 time_t GetTicks() const;
697
698 /**
699 Returns broken down representation of the date and time.
700 */
701 Tm GetTm(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
702
703 /**
704 Returns the week day in the given timezone (local one by default).
705 */
706 WeekDay GetWeekDay(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
707
708 /**
709 Returns the ordinal number of the week in the month (in 1-5 range).
710
711 As GetWeekOfYear(), this function supports both conventions for the
712 week start.
713 */
714 wxDateTime_t GetWeekOfMonth(WeekFlags flags = Monday_First,
715 const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
716
717 /**
718 Returns the number of the week of the year this date is in. The first
719 week of the year is, according to international standards, the one
720 containing Jan 4 or, equivalently, the first week which has Thursday in
721 this year. Both of these definitions are the same as saying that the
722 first week of the year must contain more than half of its days in this
723 year. Accordingly, the week number will always be in 1-53 range (52 for
724 non-leap years).
725
726 The function depends on the week start convention specified by the @a flags
727 argument but its results for @c Sunday_First are not well-defined as the
728 ISO definition quoted above applies to the weeks starting on Monday only.
729 */
730 wxDateTime_t GetWeekOfYear(WeekFlags flags = Monday_First,
731 const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
732
733 /**
734 Returns the year in the given timezone (local one by default).
735 */
736 int GetYear(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
737
738 /**
739 Returns @true if the given date is later than the date of adoption of
740 the Gregorian calendar in the given country (and hence the Gregorian
741 calendar calculations make sense for it).
742 */
743 bool IsGregorianDate(GregorianAdoption country = Gr_Standard) const;
744
745 /**
746 Returns @true if the object represents a valid time moment.
747 */
748 bool IsValid() const;
749
750 /**
751 Returns @true is this day is not a holiday in the given country.
752 */
753 bool IsWorkDay(Country country = Country_Default) const;
754
755 //@}
756
757
758
759 /**
760 @name Date Comparison
761
762 There are several functions to allow date comparison. To supplement
763 them, a few global operators, etc taking wxDateTime are defined.
764 */
765 //@{
766
767 /**
768 Returns @true if this date precedes the given one.
769 */
770 bool IsEarlierThan(const wxDateTime& datetime) const;
771
772 /**
773 Returns @true if the two dates are strictly identical.
774 */
775 bool IsEqualTo(const wxDateTime& datetime) const;
776
777 /**
778 Returns @true if the date is equal to another one up to the given time
779 interval, i.e. if the absolute difference between the two dates is less
780 than this interval.
781 */
782 bool IsEqualUpTo(const wxDateTime& dt, const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
783
784 /**
785 Returns @true if this date is later than the given one.
786 */
787 bool IsLaterThan(const wxDateTime& datetime) const;
788
789 /**
790 Returns @true if the date is the same without comparing the time parts.
791 */
792 bool IsSameDate(const wxDateTime& dt) const;
793
794 /**
795 Returns @true if the time is the same (although dates may differ).
796 */
797 bool IsSameTime(const wxDateTime& dt) const;
798
799 /**
800 Returns @true if this date lies strictly between the two given dates.
801
802 @see IsBetween()
803 */
804 bool IsStrictlyBetween(const wxDateTime& t1,
805 const wxDateTime& t2) const;
806
807 /**
808 Returns @true if IsStrictlyBetween() is @true or if the date is equal
809 to one of the limit values.
810
811 @see IsStrictlyBetween()
812 */
813 bool IsBetween(const wxDateTime& t1, const wxDateTime& t2) const;
814
815 //@}
816
817
818
819 /**
820 @name Date Arithmetics
821
822 These functions carry out
823 @ref overview_datetime_arithmetics "arithmetics" on the wxDateTime
824 objects. As explained in the overview, either wxTimeSpan or wxDateSpan
825 may be added to wxDateTime, hence all functions are overloaded to
826 accept both arguments.
827
828 Also, both Add() and Subtract() have both const and non-const version.
829 The first one returns a new object which represents the sum/difference
830 of the original one with the argument while the second form modifies
831 the object to which it is applied. The operators "-=" and "+=" are
832 defined to be equivalent to the second forms of these functions.
833 */
834 //@{
835
836 /**
837 Adds the given date span to this object.
838
839 @beginWxPythonOnly
840 This method is named "AddDS" in wxPython.
841 @endWxPythonOnly
842 */
843 wxDateTime Add(const wxDateSpan& diff) const;
844 /**
845 Adds the given date span to this object.
846
847 @beginWxPythonOnly
848 This method is named "AddDS" in wxPython.
849 @endWxPythonOnly
850 */
851 wxDateTime Add(const wxDateSpan& diff);
852 /**
853 Adds the given time span to this object.
854
855 @beginWxPythonOnly
856 This method is named "AddTS" in wxPython.
857 @endWxPythonOnly
858 */
859 wxDateTime Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
860 /**
861 Adds the given time span to this object.
862
863 @beginWxPythonOnly
864 This method is named "AddTS" in wxPython.
865 @endWxPythonOnly
866 */
867 wxDateTime& Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
868
869 /**
870 Subtracts the given time span from this object.
871
872 @beginWxPythonOnly
873 This method is named "SubtractTS" in wxPython.
874 @endWxPythonOnly
875 */
876 wxDateTime Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
877 /**
878 Subtracts the given time span from this object.
879
880 @beginWxPythonOnly
881 This method is named "SubtractTS" in wxPython.
882 @endWxPythonOnly
883 */
884 wxDateTime& Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
885 /**
886 Subtracts the given date span from this object.
887
888 @beginWxPythonOnly
889 This method is named "SubtractDS" in wxPython.
890 @endWxPythonOnly
891 */
892 wxDateTime Subtract(const wxDateSpan& diff) const;
893 /**
894 Subtracts the given date span from this object.
895
896 @beginWxPythonOnly
897 This method is named "SubtractDS" in wxPython.
898 @endWxPythonOnly
899 */
900 wxDateTime& Subtract(const wxDateSpan& diff);
901 /**
902 Subtracts another date from this one and returns the difference between
903 them as a wxTimeSpan.
904 */
905 wxTimeSpan Subtract(const wxDateTime& dt) const;
906
907 /**
908 Adds the given date span to this object.
909 */
910 wxDateTime& operator+=(const wxDateSpan& diff);
911 /**
912 Subtracts the given date span from this object.
913 */
914 wxDateTime& operator-=(const wxDateSpan& diff);
915 /**
916 Adds the given time span to this object.
917 */
918 wxDateTime& operator+=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
919 /**
920 Subtracts the given time span from this object.
921 */
922 wxDateTime& operator-=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
923
924 //@}
925
926
927
928 /**
929 @name Date Formatting and Parsing
930
931 See @ref datetime_formatting
932 */
933 //@{
934
935 /**
936 This function does the same as the standard ANSI C @c strftime(3)
937 function (http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/clibrary/ctime/strftime.html).
938 Please see its description for the meaning of @a format parameter.
939
940 It also accepts a few wxWidgets-specific extensions: you can optionally
941 specify the width of the field to follow using @c printf(3)-like syntax
942 and the format specification @c "%l" can be used to get the number of
943 milliseconds.
944
945 @see ParseFormat()
946 */
947 wxString Format(const wxString& format = wxDefaultDateTimeFormat,
948 const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
949
950 /**
951 Identical to calling Format() with @c "%x" argument (which means
952 "preferred date representation for the current locale").
953 */
954 wxString FormatDate() const;
955
956 /**
957 Returns the combined date-time representation in the ISO 8601 format
958 @c "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS". The @a sep parameter default value produces
959 the result exactly corresponding to the ISO standard, but it can also
960 be useful to use a space as separator if a more human-readable combined
961 date-time representation is needed.
962
963 @see FormatISODate(), FormatISOTime(), ParseISOCombined()
964 */
965 wxString FormatISOCombined(char sep = 'T') const;
966
967 /**
968 This function returns the date representation in the ISO 8601 format
969 @c "YYYY-MM-DD".
970 */
971 wxString FormatISODate() const;
972
973 /**
974 This function returns the time representation in the ISO 8601 format
975 @c "HH:MM:SS".
976 */
977 wxString FormatISOTime() const;
978
979 /**
980 Identical to calling Format() with @c "%X" argument (which means
981 "preferred time representation for the current locale").
982 */
983 wxString FormatTime() const;
984
985 /**
986 This function is like ParseDateTime(), but it only allows the date to
987 be specified.
988
989 It is thus less flexible then ParseDateTime(), but also has less
990 chances to misinterpret the user input.
991
992 See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
993 value.
994
995 @see Format()
996 */
997 bool ParseDate(const wxString& date, wxString::const_iterator *end);
998
999 /**
1000 Parses the string @a datetime containing the date and time in free
1001 format.
1002
1003 This function tries as hard as it can to interpret the given string as
1004 date and time. Unlike ParseRfc822Date(), it will accept anything that
1005 may be accepted and will only reject strings which cannot be parsed in
1006 any way at all. Notice that the function will fail if either date or
1007 time part is present but not both, use ParseDate() or ParseTime() to
1008 parse strings containing just the date or time component.
1009
1010 See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
1011 value.
1012 */
1013 bool ParseDateTime(const wxString& datetime, wxString::const_iterator *end);
1014
1015 /**
1016 This function parses the string @a date according to the given
1017 @e format. The system @c strptime(3) function is used whenever
1018 available, but even if it is not, this function is still implemented,
1019 although support for locale-dependent format specifiers such as
1020 @c "%c", @c "%x" or @c "%X" may not be perfect and GNU extensions such
1021 as @c "%z" and @c "%Z" are not implemented. This function does handle
1022 the month and weekday names in the current locale on all platforms,
1023 however.
1024
1025 Please see the description of the ANSI C function @c strftime(3) for
1026 the syntax of the format string.
1027
1028 The @a dateDef parameter is used to fill in the fields which could not
1029 be determined from the format string. For example, if the format is
1030 @c "%d" (the day of the month), the month and the year are taken from
1031 @a dateDef. If it is not specified, Today() is used as the default
1032 date.
1033
1034 Example of using this function:
1035 @code
1036 wxDateTime dt;
1037 wxString str = "...";
1038 wxString::const_iterator end;
1039 if ( !dt.ParseFormat(str, "%Y-%m-%d", &end) )
1040 ... parsing failed ...
1041 else if ( end == str.end() )
1042 ... entire string parsed ...
1043 else
1044 ... wxString(end, str.end()) left over ...
1045 @endcode
1046
1047 @param date
1048 The string to be parsed.
1049 @param format
1050 strptime()-like format string.
1051 @param dateDef
1052 Used to fill in the date components not specified in the @a date
1053 string.
1054 @param end
1055 Will be filled with the iterator pointing to the location where the
1056 parsing stopped if the function returns @true. If the entire string
1057 was consumed, it is set to @c date.end(). Notice that this argument
1058 must be non-@NULL.
1059 @return
1060 @true if at least part of the string was parsed successfully,
1061 @false otherwise.
1062
1063 @see Format()
1064 */
1065 bool ParseFormat(const wxString& date,
1066 const wxString& format,
1067 const wxDateTime& dateDef,
1068 wxString::const_iterator *end);
1069
1070 /**
1071 @overload
1072 */
1073 bool ParseFormat(const wxString& date,
1074 const wxString& format,
1075 wxString::const_iterator *end);
1076
1077 /**
1078 @overload
1079 */
1080 bool ParseFormat(const wxString& date, wxString::const_iterator *end);
1081
1082 /**
1083 This function parses the string containing the date and time in ISO
1084 8601 combined format @c "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS". The separator between
1085 the date and time parts must be equal to @a sep for the function to
1086 succeed.
1087
1088 @return @true if the entire string was parsed successfully, @false
1089 otherwise.
1090 */
1091 bool ParseISOCombined(const wxString& date, char sep = 'T');
1092
1093 /**
1094 This function parses the date in ISO 8601 format @c "YYYY-MM-DD".
1095
1096 @return @true if the entire string was parsed successfully, @false
1097 otherwise.
1098 */
1099 bool ParseISODate(const wxString& date);
1100
1101 /**
1102 This function parses the time in ISO 8601 format @c "HH:MM:SS".
1103
1104 @return @true if the entire string was parsed successfully, @false
1105 otherwise.
1106 */
1107 bool ParseISOTime(const wxString& date);
1108
1109 /**
1110 Parses the string @a date looking for a date formatted according to the
1111 RFC 822 in it. The exact description of this format may, of course, be
1112 found in the RFC (section 5), but, briefly, this is the format used in
1113 the headers of Internet email messages and one of the most common
1114 strings expressing date in this format may be something like
1115 @c "Sat, 18 Dec 1999 00:48:30 +0100".
1116
1117 Returns @NULL if the conversion failed, otherwise return the pointer to
1118 the character immediately following the part of the string which could
1119 be parsed. If the entire string contains only the date in RFC 822
1120 format, the returned pointer will be pointing to a @c NUL character.
1121
1122 This function is intentionally strict, it will return an error for any
1123 string which is not RFC 822 compliant. If you need to parse date
1124 formatted in more free ways, you should use ParseDateTime() or
1125 ParseDate() instead.
1126
1127 See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
1128 value.
1129 */
1130 bool ParseRfc822Date(const wxString& date, wxString::const_iterator *end);
1131
1132 /**
1133 This functions is like ParseDateTime(), but only allows the time to be
1134 specified in the input string.
1135
1136 See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
1137 value.
1138 */
1139 bool ParseTime(const wxString& time, wxString::const_iterator *end);
1140
1141 //@}
1142
1143
1144
1145 /**
1146 @name Calendar Calculations
1147
1148 The functions in this section perform the basic calendar calculations,
1149 mostly related to the week days. They allow to find the given week day
1150 in the week with given number (either in the month or in the year) and
1151 so on.
1152
1153 None of the functions in this section modify the time part of the
1154 wxDateTime, they only work with the date part of it.
1155 */
1156 //@{
1157
1158 /**
1159 Returns the copy of this object to which SetToLastMonthDay() was
1160 applied.
1161 */
1162 wxDateTime GetLastMonthDay(Month month = Inv_Month,
1163 int year = Inv_Year) const;
1164
1165 /**
1166 Returns the copy of this object to which SetToLastWeekDay() was
1167 applied.
1168 */
1169 wxDateTime GetLastWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, Month month = Inv_Month,
1170 int year = Inv_Year);
1171
1172 /**
1173 Returns the copy of this object to which SetToNextWeekDay() was
1174 applied.
1175 */
1176 wxDateTime GetNextWeekDay(WeekDay weekday) const;
1177
1178 /**
1179 Returns the copy of this object to which SetToPrevWeekDay() was
1180 applied.
1181 */
1182 wxDateTime GetPrevWeekDay(WeekDay weekday) const;
1183
1184 /**
1185 Returns the copy of this object to which SetToWeekDay() was applied.
1186 */
1187 wxDateTime GetWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, int n = 1, Month month = Inv_Month,
1188 int year = Inv_Year) const;
1189
1190 /**
1191 Returns the copy of this object to which SetToWeekDayInSameWeek() was
1192 applied.
1193 */
1194 wxDateTime GetWeekDayInSameWeek(WeekDay weekday,
1195 WeekFlags flags = Monday_First) const;
1196
1197 /**
1198 Returns the copy of this object to which SetToYearDay() was applied.
1199 */
1200 wxDateTime GetYearDay(wxDateTime_t yday) const;
1201
1202 /**
1203 Sets the date to the last day in the specified month (the current one
1204 by default).
1205
1206 @return The reference to the modified object itself.
1207 */
1208 wxDateTime& SetToLastMonthDay(Month month = Inv_Month, int year = Inv_Year);
1209
1210 /**
1211 The effect of calling this function is the same as of calling
1212 @c SetToWeekDay(-1, weekday, month, year). The date will be set to the
1213 last @a weekday in the given month and year (the current ones by
1214 default). Always returns @true.
1215 */
1216 bool SetToLastWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, Month month = Inv_Month,
1217 int year = Inv_Year);
1218
1219 /**
1220 Sets the date so that it will be the first @a weekday following the
1221 current date.
1222
1223 @return The reference to the modified object itself.
1224 */
1225 wxDateTime& SetToNextWeekDay(WeekDay weekday);
1226
1227 /**
1228 Sets the date so that it will be the last @a weekday before the current
1229 date.
1230
1231 @return The reference to the modified object itself.
1232 */
1233 wxDateTime& SetToPrevWeekDay(WeekDay weekday);
1234
1235 /**
1236 Sets the date to the @e n-th @a weekday in the given month of the given
1237 year (the current month and year are used by default). The parameter
1238 @a n may be either positive (counting from the beginning of the month)
1239 or negative (counting from the end of it).
1240
1241 For example, SetToWeekDay(2, wxDateTime::Wed) will set the date to the
1242 second Wednesday in the current month and
1243 SetToWeekDay(-1, wxDateTime::Sun) will set the date to the last Sunday
1244 in the current month.
1245
1246 @return @true if the date was modified successfully, @false otherwise
1247 meaning that the specified date doesn't exist.
1248 */
1249 bool SetToWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, int n = 1,
1250 Month month = Inv_Month, int year = Inv_Year);
1251
1252 /**
1253 Adjusts the date so that it will still lie in the same week as before,
1254 but its week day will be the given one.
1255
1256 @return The reference to the modified object itself.
1257 */
1258 wxDateTime& SetToWeekDayInSameWeek(WeekDay weekday,
1259 WeekFlags flags = Monday_First);
1260
1261 /**
1262 Sets the date to the day number @a yday in the same year (i.e., unlike
1263 the other functions, this one does not use the current year). The day
1264 number should be in the range 1-366 for the leap years and 1-365 for
1265 the other ones.
1266
1267 @return The reference to the modified object itself.
1268 */
1269 wxDateTime& SetToYearDay(wxDateTime_t yday);
1270
1271 //@}
1272
1273
1274
1275 /**
1276 @name Astronomical/Historical Functions
1277
1278 Some degree of support for the date units used in astronomy and/or
1279 history is provided. You can construct a wxDateTime object from a
1280 JDN and you may also get its JDN, MJD or Rata Die number from it.
1281
1282 Related functions in other groups: wxDateTime(double), Set(double)
1283 */
1284 //@{
1285
1286 /**
1287 Synonym for GetJulianDayNumber().
1288 */
1289 double GetJDN() const;
1290
1291 /**
1292 Returns the JDN corresponding to this date. Beware of rounding errors!
1293
1294 @see GetModifiedJulianDayNumber()
1295 */
1296 double GetJulianDayNumber() const;
1297
1298 /**
1299 Synonym for GetModifiedJulianDayNumber().
1300 */
1301 double GetMJD() const;
1302
1303 /**
1304 Returns the @e "Modified Julian Day Number" (MJD) which is, by
1305 definition, is equal to JDN - 2400000.5.
1306 The MJDs are simpler to work with as the integral MJDs correspond to
1307 midnights of the dates in the Gregorian calendar and not the noons like
1308 JDN. The MJD 0 represents Nov 17, 1858.
1309 */
1310 double GetModifiedJulianDayNumber() const;
1311
1312 /**
1313 Return the @e Rata Die number of this date.
1314
1315 By definition, the Rata Die number is a date specified as the number of
1316 days relative to a base date of December 31 of the year 0. Thus January
1317 1 of the year 1 is Rata Die day 1.
1318 */
1319 double GetRataDie() const;
1320
1321 //@}
1322
1323
1324
1325 /**
1326 @name Time Zone and DST Support
1327
1328 Please see the @ref overview_datetime_timezones "time zone overview"
1329 for more information about time zones. Normally, these functions should
1330 be rarely used.
1331
1332 Related functions in other groups: GetBeginDST(), GetEndDST()
1333 */
1334 //@{
1335
1336 /**
1337 Transform the date from the given time zone to the local one. If
1338 @a noDST is @true, no DST adjustments will be made.
1339
1340 @return The date in the local time zone.
1341 */
1342 wxDateTime FromTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false) const;
1343
1344 /**
1345 Returns @true if the DST is applied for this date in the given country.
1346
1347 @see GetBeginDST(), GetEndDST()
1348 */
1349 int IsDST(Country country = Country_Default) const;
1350
1351 /**
1352 Same as FromTimezone() but modifies the object in place.
1353 */
1354 wxDateTime& MakeFromTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false);
1355
1356 /**
1357 Modifies the object in place to represent the date in another time
1358 zone. If @a noDST is @true, no DST adjustments will be made.
1359 */
1360 wxDateTime& MakeTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false);
1361
1362 /**
1363 This is the same as calling MakeTimezone() with the argument @c GMT0.
1364 */
1365 wxDateTime& MakeUTC(bool noDST = false);
1366
1367 /**
1368 Transform the date to the given time zone. If @a noDST is @true, no DST
1369 adjustments will be made.
1370
1371 @return The date in the new time zone.
1372 */
1373 wxDateTime ToTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false) const;
1374
1375 /**
1376 This is the same as calling ToTimezone() with the argument @c GMT0.
1377 */
1378 wxDateTime ToUTC(bool noDST = false) const;
1379
1380 //@}
1381
1382
1383
1384
1385
1386 /**
1387 Converts the year in absolute notation (i.e. a number which can be
1388 negative, positive or zero) to the year in BC/AD notation. For the
1389 positive years, nothing is done, but the year 0 is year 1 BC and so for
1390 other years there is a difference of 1.
1391
1392 This function should be used like this:
1393
1394 @code
1395 wxDateTime dt(...);
1396 int y = dt.GetYear();
1397 printf("The year is %d%s", wxDateTime::ConvertYearToBC(y), y > 0 ? "AD" : "BC");
1398 @endcode
1399 */
1400 static int ConvertYearToBC(int year);
1401
1402 /**
1403 Returns the translations of the strings @c AM and @c PM used for time
1404 formatting for the current locale. Either of the pointers may be @NULL
1405 if the corresponding value is not needed.
1406 */
1407 static void GetAmPmStrings(wxString* am, wxString* pm);
1408
1409 /**
1410 Get the beginning of DST for the given country in the given year
1411 (current one by default). This function suffers from limitations
1412 described in the @ref overview_datetime_dst "DST overview".
1413
1414 @see GetEndDST()
1415 */
1416 static wxDateTime GetBeginDST(int year = Inv_Year,
1417 Country country = Country_Default);
1418
1419 /**
1420 Returns the end of DST for the given country in the given year (current
1421 one by default).
1422
1423 @see GetBeginDST()
1424 */
1425 static wxDateTime GetEndDST(int year = Inv_Year,
1426 Country country = Country_Default);
1427
1428 /**
1429 Get the current century, i.e. first two digits of the year, in given
1430 calendar (only Gregorian is currently supported).
1431 */
1432 static int GetCentury(int year);
1433
1434 /**
1435 Returns the current default country. The default country is used for
1436 DST calculations, for example.
1437
1438 @see SetCountry()
1439 */
1440 static Country GetCountry();
1441
1442 /**
1443 Get the current month in given calendar (only Gregorian is currently
1444 supported).
1445 */
1446 static Month GetCurrentMonth(Calendar cal = Gregorian);
1447
1448 /**
1449 Get the current year in given calendar (only Gregorian is currently
1450 supported).
1451 */
1452 static int GetCurrentYear(Calendar cal = Gregorian);
1453
1454 /**
1455 Return the standard English name of the given month.
1456
1457 This function always returns "January" or "Jan" for January, use
1458 GetMonthName() to retrieve the name of the month in the users current
1459 locale.
1460
1461 @param month
1462 One of wxDateTime::Jan, ..., wxDateTime::Dec values.
1463 @param flags
1464 Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
1465
1466 @see GetEnglishWeekDayName()
1467
1468 @since 2.9.0
1469 */
1470 static wxString GetEnglishMonthName(Month month,
1471 NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
1472
1473 /**
1474 Return the standard English name of the given week day.
1475
1476 This function always returns "Monday" or "Mon" for Monday, use
1477 GetWeekDayName() to retrieve the name of the month in the users current
1478 locale.
1479
1480 @param weekday
1481 One of wxDateTime::Sun, ..., wxDateTime::Sat values.
1482 @param flags
1483 Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
1484
1485 @see GetEnglishMonthName()
1486
1487 @since 2.9.0
1488 */
1489 static wxString GetEnglishWeekDayName(WeekDay weekday,
1490 NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
1491
1492 /**
1493 Gets the full (default) or abbreviated name of the given month.
1494
1495 This function returns the name in the current locale, use
1496 GetEnglishMonthName() to get the untranslated name if necessary.
1497
1498 @param month
1499 One of wxDateTime::Jan, ..., wxDateTime::Dec values.
1500 @param flags
1501 Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
1502
1503 @see GetWeekDayName()
1504 */
1505 static wxString GetMonthName(Month month, NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
1506
1507 /**
1508 Returns the number of days in the given year. The only supported value
1509 for @a cal currently is @c Gregorian.
1510
1511 @beginWxPythonOnly
1512 This method is named "GetNumberOfDaysInYear" in wxPython.
1513 @endWxPythonOnly
1514 */
1515 static wxDateTime_t GetNumberOfDays(int year, Calendar cal = Gregorian);
1516
1517 /**
1518 Returns the number of days in the given month of the given year. The
1519 only supported value for @a cal currently is @c Gregorian.
1520
1521 @beginWxPythonOnly
1522 This method is named "GetNumberOfDaysInMonth" in wxPython.
1523 @endWxPythonOnly
1524 */
1525 static wxDateTime_t GetNumberOfDays(Month month, int year = Inv_Year,
1526 Calendar cal = Gregorian);
1527
1528 /**
1529 Returns the current time.
1530 */
1531 static time_t GetTimeNow();
1532
1533 /**
1534 Returns the current time broken down using the buffer whose address is
1535 passed to the function with @a tm to store the result.
1536 */
1537 static tm* GetTmNow(struct tm *tm);
1538
1539 /**
1540 Returns the current time broken down. Note that this function returns a
1541 pointer to a static buffer that's reused by calls to this function and
1542 certain C library functions (e.g. localtime). If there is any chance
1543 your code might be used in a multi-threaded application, you really
1544 should use GetTmNow(struct tm *) instead.
1545 */
1546 static tm* GetTmNow();
1547
1548 /**
1549 Gets the full (default) or abbreviated name of the given week day.
1550
1551 This function returns the name in the current locale, use
1552 GetEnglishWeekDayName() to get the untranslated name if necessary.
1553
1554 @param weekday
1555 One of wxDateTime::Sun, ..., wxDateTime::Sat values.
1556 @param flags
1557 Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
1558
1559 @see GetMonthName()
1560 */
1561 static wxString GetWeekDayName(WeekDay weekday,
1562 NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
1563
1564 /**
1565 Returns @true if DST was used in the given year (the current one by
1566 default) in the given country.
1567 */
1568 static bool IsDSTApplicable(int year = Inv_Year,
1569 Country country = Country_Default);
1570
1571 /**
1572 Returns @true if the @a year is a leap one in the specified calendar.
1573 This functions supports Gregorian and Julian calendars.
1574 */
1575 static bool IsLeapYear(int year = Inv_Year, Calendar cal = Gregorian);
1576
1577 /**
1578 This function returns @true if the specified (or default) country is
1579 one of Western European ones. It is used internally by wxDateTime to
1580 determine the DST convention and date and time formatting rules.
1581 */
1582 static bool IsWestEuropeanCountry(Country country = Country_Default);
1583
1584 /**
1585 Returns the object corresponding to the current time.
1586
1587 Example:
1588
1589 @code
1590 wxDateTime now = wxDateTime::Now();
1591 printf("Current time in Paris:\t%s\n", now.Format("%c", wxDateTime::CET).c_str());
1592 @endcode
1593
1594 @note This function is accurate up to seconds. UNow() should be used
1595 for better precision, but it is less efficient and might not be
1596 available on all platforms.
1597
1598 @see Today()
1599 */
1600 static wxDateTime Now();
1601
1602 /**
1603 Sets the country to use by default. This setting influences the DST
1604 calculations, date formatting and other things.
1605
1606 @see GetCountry()
1607 */
1608 static void SetCountry(Country country);
1609
1610 /**
1611 Set the date to the given @a weekday in the week number @a numWeek of
1612 the given @a year . The number should be in range 1-53.
1613
1614 Note that the returned date may be in a different year than the one
1615 passed to this function because both the week 1 and week 52 or 53 (for
1616 leap years) contain days from different years. See GetWeekOfYear() for
1617 the explanation of how the year weeks are counted.
1618 */
1619 static wxDateTime SetToWeekOfYear(int year, wxDateTime_t numWeek,
1620 WeekDay weekday = Mon);
1621
1622 /**
1623 Returns the object corresponding to the midnight of the current day
1624 (i.e. the same as Now(), but the time part is set to 0).
1625
1626 @see Now()
1627 */
1628 static wxDateTime Today();
1629
1630 /**
1631 Returns the object corresponding to the current time including the
1632 milliseconds if a function to get time with such precision is available
1633 on the current platform (supported under most Unices and Win32).
1634
1635 @see Now()
1636 */
1637 static wxDateTime UNow();
1638 };
1639
1640 /**
1641 Global instance of an empty wxDateTime object.
1642
1643 @todo Would it be better to rename this wxNullDateTime so it's consistent
1644 with the rest of the "empty/invalid/null" global objects?
1645 */
1646 const wxDateTime wxDefaultDateTime;
1647
1648 /*
1649 wxInvalidDateTime is an alias for wxDefaultDateTime.
1650 */
1651 #define wxInvalidDateTime wxDefaultDateTime
1652
1653
1654 /**
1655 @class wxDateTimeWorkDays
1656
1657 @todo Write wxDateTimeWorkDays documentation.
1658
1659 @library{wxbase}
1660 @category{data}
1661 */
1662 class wxDateTimeWorkDays
1663 {
1664 public:
1665
1666 };
1667
1668
1669
1670 /**
1671 @class wxDateSpan
1672
1673 This class is a "logical time span" and is useful for implementing program
1674 logic for such things as "add one month to the date" which, in general,
1675 doesn't mean to add 60*60*24*31 seconds to it, but to take the same date
1676 the next month (to understand that this is indeed different consider adding
1677 one month to Feb, 15 -- we want to get Mar, 15, of course).
1678
1679 When adding a month to the date, all lesser components (days, hours, ...)
1680 won't be changed unless the resulting date would be invalid: for example,
1681 Jan 31 + 1 month will be Feb 28, not (non-existing) Feb 31.
1682
1683 Because of this feature, adding and subtracting back again the same
1684 wxDateSpan will @b not, in general, give back the original date: Feb 28 - 1
1685 month will be Jan 28, not Jan 31!
1686
1687 wxDateSpan objects can be either positive or negative. They may be
1688 multiplied by scalars which multiply all deltas by the scalar: i.e.
1689 2*(1 month and 1 day) is 2 months and 2 days. They can be added together
1690 with wxDateTime or wxTimeSpan, but the type of result is different for each
1691 case.
1692
1693 @warning If you specify both weeks and days, the total number of days added
1694 will be 7*weeks + days! See also GetTotalDays().
1695
1696 Equality operators are defined for wxDateSpans. Two wxDateSpans are equal
1697 if and only if they both give the same target date when added to @b every
1698 source date. Thus wxDateSpan::Months(1) is not equal to
1699 wxDateSpan::Days(30), because they don't give the same date when added to
1700 Feb 1st. But wxDateSpan::Days(14) is equal to wxDateSpan::Weeks(2).
1701
1702 Finally, notice that for adding hours, minutes and so on you don't need
1703 this class at all: wxTimeSpan will do the job because there are no
1704 subtleties associated with those (we don't support leap seconds).
1705
1706 @library{wxbase}
1707 @category{data}
1708
1709 @see @ref overview_datetime, wxDateTime
1710 */
1711 class wxDateSpan
1712 {
1713 public:
1714 /**
1715 Constructs the date span object for the given number of years, months,
1716 weeks and days. Note that the weeks and days add together if both are
1717 given.
1718 */
1719 wxDateSpan(int years = 0, int months = 0, int weeks = 0, int days = 0);
1720
1721 /**
1722 Returns the sum of two date spans.
1723
1724 @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
1725 */
1726 wxDateSpan Add(const wxDateSpan& other) const;
1727 /**
1728 Adds the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns a reference
1729 to itself.
1730 */
1731 wxDateSpan& Add(const wxDateSpan& other);
1732
1733 /**
1734 Returns a date span object corresponding to one day.
1735
1736 @see Days()
1737 */
1738 static wxDateSpan Day();
1739
1740 /**
1741 Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of days.
1742
1743 @see Day()
1744 */
1745 static wxDateSpan Days(int days);
1746
1747 /**
1748 Returns the number of days (not counting the weeks component) in this
1749 date span.
1750
1751 @see GetTotalDays()
1752 */
1753 int GetDays() const;
1754
1755 /**
1756 Returns the number of the months (not counting the years) in this date
1757 span.
1758 */
1759 int GetMonths() const;
1760
1761 /**
1762 Returns the combined number of days in this date span, counting both
1763 weeks and days. This doesn't take months or years into account.
1764
1765 @see GetWeeks(), GetDays()
1766 */
1767 int GetTotalDays() const;
1768
1769 /**
1770 Returns the number of weeks in this date span.
1771
1772 @see GetTotalDays()
1773 */
1774 int GetWeeks() const;
1775
1776 /**
1777 Returns the number of years in this date span.
1778 */
1779 int GetYears() const;
1780
1781 /**
1782 Returns a date span object corresponding to one month.
1783
1784 @see Months()
1785 */
1786 static wxDateSpan Month();
1787
1788 /**
1789 Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of months.
1790
1791 @see Month()
1792 */
1793 static wxDateSpan Months(int mon);
1794
1795 /**
1796 Returns the product of the date span by the specified @a factor. The
1797 product is computed by multiplying each of the components by the
1798 @a factor.
1799
1800 @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
1801 */
1802 wxDateSpan Multiply(int factor) const;
1803 /**
1804 Multiplies this date span by the specified @a factor. The product is
1805 computed by multiplying each of the components by the @a factor.
1806
1807 @return A reference to this wxDateSpan object modified in place.
1808 */
1809 wxDateSpan& Multiply(int factor);
1810
1811 /**
1812 Changes the sign of this date span.
1813
1814 @see Negate()
1815 */
1816 wxDateSpan& Neg();
1817
1818 /**
1819 Returns a date span with the opposite sign.
1820
1821 @see Neg()
1822 */
1823 wxDateSpan Negate() const;
1824
1825 /**
1826 Sets the number of days (without modifying any other components) in
1827 this date span.
1828 */
1829 wxDateSpan& SetDays(int n);
1830
1831 /**
1832 Sets the number of months (without modifying any other components) in
1833 this date span.
1834 */
1835 wxDateSpan& SetMonths(int n);
1836
1837 /**
1838 Sets the number of weeks (without modifying any other components) in
1839 this date span.
1840 */
1841 wxDateSpan& SetWeeks(int n);
1842
1843 /**
1844 Sets the number of years (without modifying any other components) in
1845 this date span.
1846 */
1847 wxDateSpan& SetYears(int n);
1848
1849 /**
1850 Returns the difference of two date spans.
1851
1852 @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
1853 */
1854 wxDateSpan Subtract(const wxDateSpan& other) const;
1855 /**
1856 Subtracts the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns a
1857 reference to itself.
1858 */
1859 wxDateSpan& Subtract(const wxDateSpan& other);
1860
1861 /**
1862 Returns a date span object corresponding to one week.
1863
1864 @see Weeks()
1865 */
1866 static wxDateSpan Week();
1867
1868 /**
1869 Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of weeks.
1870
1871 @see Week()
1872 */
1873 static wxDateSpan Weeks(int weeks);
1874
1875 /**
1876 Returns a date span object corresponding to one year.
1877
1878 @see Years()
1879 */
1880 static wxDateSpan Year();
1881
1882 /**
1883 Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of years.
1884
1885 @see Year()
1886 */
1887 static wxDateSpan Years(int years);
1888
1889 /**
1890 Adds the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns the result.
1891 */
1892 wxDateSpan& operator+=(const wxDateSpan& other);
1893
1894 /**
1895 Subtracts the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns the
1896 result.
1897 */
1898 wxDateSpan& operator-=(const wxDateSpan& other);
1899
1900 /**
1901 Changes the sign of this date span.
1902
1903 @see Negate()
1904 */
1905 wxDateSpan& operator-();
1906
1907 /**
1908 Multiplies this date span by the specified @a factor. The product is
1909 computed by multiplying each of the components by the @a factor.
1910
1911 @return A reference to this wxDateSpan object modified in place.
1912 */
1913 wxDateSpan& operator*=(int factor);
1914
1915 /**
1916 Returns @true if this date span is different from the other one.
1917 */
1918 bool operator!=(const wxDateSpan&) const;
1919
1920 /**
1921 Returns @true if this date span is equal to the other one. Two date
1922 spans are considered equal if and only if they have the same number of
1923 years and months and the same total number of days (counting both days
1924 and weeks).
1925 */
1926 bool operator==(const wxDateSpan&) const;
1927 };
1928
1929
1930
1931 /**
1932 @class wxTimeSpan
1933
1934 wxTimeSpan class represents a time interval.
1935
1936 @library{wxbase}
1937 @category{data}
1938
1939 @see @ref overview_datetime, wxDateTime
1940 */
1941 class wxTimeSpan
1942 {
1943 public:
1944 /**
1945 Default constructor, constructs a zero timespan.
1946 */
1947 wxTimeSpan();
1948 /**
1949 Constructs timespan from separate values for each component, with the
1950 date set to 0. Hours are not restricted to 0-24 range, neither are
1951 minutes, seconds or milliseconds.
1952 */
1953 wxTimeSpan(long hours, long min = 0, wxLongLong sec = 0, wxLongLong msec = 0);
1954
1955 /**
1956 Returns the absolute value of the timespan: does not modify the object.
1957 */
1958 wxTimeSpan Abs() const;
1959
1960 /**
1961 Returns the sum of two time spans.
1962
1963 @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
1964 */
1965 wxTimeSpan Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
1966 /**
1967 Adds the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns a reference
1968 to itself.
1969 */
1970 wxTimeSpan& Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
1971
1972 /**
1973 Returns the timespan for one day.
1974 */
1975 static wxTimeSpan Day();
1976
1977 /**
1978 Returns the timespan for the given number of days.
1979 */
1980 static wxTimeSpan Days(long days);
1981
1982 /**
1983 Returns the string containing the formatted representation of the time
1984 span. The following format specifiers are allowed after %:
1985
1986 - @c H - Number of Hours
1987 - @c M - Number of Minutes
1988 - @c S - Number of Seconds
1989 - @c l - Number of Milliseconds
1990 - @c D - Number of Days
1991 - @c E - Number of Weeks
1992 - @c % - The percent character
1993
1994 Note that, for example, the number of hours in the description above is
1995 not well defined: it can be either the total number of hours (for
1996 example, for a time span of 50 hours this would be 50) or just the hour
1997 part of the time span, which would be 2 in this case as 50 hours is
1998 equal to 2 days and 2 hours.
1999
2000 wxTimeSpan resolves this ambiguity in the following way: if there had
2001 been, indeed, the @c %D format specified preceding the @c %H, then it
2002 is interpreted as 2. Otherwise, it is 50.
2003
2004 The same applies to all other format specifiers: if they follow a
2005 specifier of larger unit, only the rest part is taken, otherwise the
2006 full value is used.
2007 */
2008 wxString Format(const wxString& = wxDefaultTimeSpanFormat) const;
2009
2010 /**
2011 Returns the difference in number of days.
2012 */
2013 int GetDays() const;
2014
2015 /**
2016 Returns the difference in number of hours.
2017 */
2018 int GetHours() const;
2019
2020 /**
2021 Returns the difference in number of milliseconds.
2022 */
2023 wxLongLong GetMilliseconds() const;
2024
2025 /**
2026 Returns the difference in number of minutes.
2027 */
2028 int GetMinutes() const;
2029
2030 /**
2031 Returns the difference in number of seconds.
2032 */
2033 wxLongLong GetSeconds() const;
2034
2035 /**
2036 Returns the internal representation of timespan.
2037 */
2038 wxLongLong GetValue() const;
2039
2040 /**
2041 Returns the difference in number of weeks.
2042 */
2043 int GetWeeks() const;
2044
2045 /**
2046 Returns the timespan for one hour.
2047 */
2048 static wxTimeSpan Hour();
2049
2050 /**
2051 Returns the timespan for the given number of hours.
2052 */
2053 static wxTimeSpan Hours(long hours);
2054
2055 /**
2056 Returns @true if two timespans are equal.
2057 */
2058 bool IsEqualTo(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
2059
2060 /**
2061 Compares two timespans: works with the absolute values, i.e. -2 hours
2062 is longer than 1 hour. Also, it will return @false if the timespans are
2063 equal in absolute value.
2064 */
2065 bool IsLongerThan(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
2066
2067 /**
2068 Returns @true if the timespan is negative.
2069 */
2070 bool IsNegative() const;
2071
2072 /**
2073 Returns @true if the timespan is empty.
2074 */
2075 bool IsNull() const;
2076
2077 /**
2078 Returns @true if the timespan is positive.
2079 */
2080 bool IsPositive() const;
2081
2082 /**
2083 Compares two timespans: works with the absolute values, i.e. 1 hour is
2084 shorter than -2 hours. Also, it will return @false if the timespans are
2085 equal in absolute value.
2086 */
2087 bool IsShorterThan(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
2088
2089 /**
2090 Returns the timespan for one millisecond.
2091 */
2092 static wxTimeSpan Millisecond();
2093
2094 /**
2095 Returns the timespan for the given number of milliseconds.
2096 */
2097 static wxTimeSpan Milliseconds(wxLongLong ms);
2098
2099 /**
2100 Returns the timespan for one minute.
2101 */
2102 static wxTimeSpan Minute();
2103
2104 /**
2105 Returns the timespan for the given number of minutes.
2106 */
2107 static wxTimeSpan Minutes(long min);
2108
2109 /**
2110 Returns the product of this time span by @a n.
2111
2112 @return A new wxTimeSpan object with the result.
2113 */
2114 wxTimeSpan Multiply(int n) const;
2115 /**
2116 Multiplies this time span by @a n.
2117
2118 @return A reference to this wxTimeSpan object modified in place.
2119 */
2120 wxTimeSpan& Multiply(int n);
2121
2122 /**
2123 Negate the value of the timespan.
2124
2125 @see Negate()
2126 */
2127 wxTimeSpan& Neg();
2128
2129 /**
2130 Returns timespan with inverted sign.
2131
2132 @see Neg()
2133 */
2134 wxTimeSpan Negate() const;
2135
2136 /**
2137 Returns the timespan for one second.
2138 */
2139 static wxTimeSpan Second();
2140
2141 /**
2142 Returns the timespan for the given number of seconds.
2143 */
2144 static wxTimeSpan Seconds(wxLongLong sec);
2145
2146 /**
2147 Returns the difference of two time spans.
2148
2149 @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
2150 */
2151 wxTimeSpan Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
2152 /**
2153 Subtracts the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns a
2154 reference to itself.
2155 */
2156 wxTimeSpan& Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
2157
2158 /**
2159 Returns the timespan for one week.
2160 */
2161 static wxTimeSpan Week();
2162
2163 /**
2164 Returns the timespan for the given number of weeks.
2165 */
2166 static wxTimeSpan Weeks(long weeks);
2167
2168 /**
2169 Adds the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns the result.
2170 */
2171 wxTimeSpan& operator+=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
2172
2173 /**
2174 Multiplies this time span by @a n.
2175
2176 @return A reference to this wxTimeSpan object modified in place.
2177 */
2178 wxTimeSpan& operator*=(int n);
2179
2180 /**
2181 Negate the value of the timespan.
2182
2183 @see Negate()
2184 */
2185 wxTimeSpan& operator-();
2186
2187 /**
2188 Subtracts the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns the
2189 result.
2190 */
2191 wxTimeSpan& operator-=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
2192 };
2193
2194
2195
2196 /**
2197 @class wxDateTimeHolidayAuthority
2198
2199 @todo Write wxDateTimeHolidayAuthority documentation.
2200
2201 @library{wxbase}
2202 @category{data}
2203 */
2204 class wxDateTimeHolidayAuthority
2205 {
2206 public:
2207
2208 };
2209