Chronic is a natural language date/time parser written in pure Ruby. See below for the wide variety of formats Chronic will parse.
$ gem install chronic
require 'chronic'
Time.now #=> Sun Aug 27 23:18:25 PDT 2006
Chronic.parse('tomorrow')
#=> Mon Aug 28 12:00:00 PDT 2006
Chronic.parse('monday', :context => :past)
#=> Mon Aug 21 12:00:00 PDT 2006
Chronic.parse('this tuesday 5:00')
#=> Tue Aug 29 17:00:00 PDT 2006
Chronic.parse('this tuesday 5:00', :ambiguous_time_range => :none)
#=> Tue Aug 29 05:00:00 PDT 2006
Chronic.parse('may 27th', :now => Time.local(2000, 1, 1))
#=> Sat May 27 12:00:00 PDT 2000
Chronic.parse('may 27th', :guess => false)
#=> Sun May 27 00:00:00 PDT 2007..Mon May 28 00:00:00 PDT 2007
Chronic.parse('6/4/2012', :endian_precedence => :little)
#=> Fri Apr 06 00:00:00 PDT 2012
Chronic.parse('INVALID DATE')
#=> nil
If the parser can find a date or time, either a Time or Chronic::Span
will be returned (depending on the value of :guess
). If no
date or time can be found, nil
will be returned.
See Chronic.parse
for detailed usage instructions.
Chronic can parse a huge variety of date and time formats. Following is a small sample of strings that will be properly parsed. Parsing is case insensitive and will handle common abbreviations and misspellings.
Simple
- thursday
- november
- summer
- friday 13:00
- mon 2:35
- 4pm
- 10 to 8
- 10 past 2
- half past 2
- 6 in the morning
- friday 1pm
- sat 7 in the evening
- yesterday
- today
- tomorrow
- last week
- next week
- this tuesday
- next month
- last winter
- this morning
- last night
- this second
- yesterday at 4:00
- last friday at 20:00
- last week tuesday
- tomorrow at 6:45pm
- afternoon yesterday
- thursday last week
Complex
- 3 years ago
- a year ago
- 5 months before now
- 7 hours ago
- 7 days from now
- 1 week hence
- in 3 hours
- 1 year ago tomorrow
- 3 months ago saturday at 5:00 pm
- 7 hours before tomorrow at noon
- 3rd wednesday in november
- 3rd month next year
- 3rd thursday this september
- 4th day last week
- fourteenth of june 2010 at eleven o'clock in the evening
- may seventh '97 at three in the morning
Specific Dates
- January 5
- 22nd of june
- 5th may 2017
- February twenty first
- dec 25
- may 27th
- October 2006
- oct 06
- jan 3 2010
- february 14, 2004
- february 14th, 2004
- 3 jan 2000
- 17 april 85
- 5/27/1979
- 27/5/1979
- 05/06
- 1979-05-27
- Friday
- 5
- 4:00
- 17:00
- 0800
Specific Times (many of the above with an added time)
- January 5 at 7pm
- 22nd of june at 8am
- 1979-05-27 05:00:00
- 03/01/2012 07:25:09.234567
- etc
Chronic allows you to set which Time class to use when constructing times. By default, the built in Ruby time class creates times in your system's local time zone. You can set this to something like ActiveSupport's TimeZone class to get full time zone support.
>> Time.zone = "UTC"
>> Chronic.time_class = Time.zone
>> Chronic.parse("June 15 2006 at 5:45 AM")
=> Thu, 15 Jun 2006 05:45:00 UTC +00:00
Chronic uses Ruby's built in Time class for all time storage and computation. Because of this, only times that the Time class can handle will be properly parsed. Parsing for times outside of this range will simply return nil. Support for a wider range of times is planned for a future release.
If you'd like to hack on Chronic, start by forking the repo on GitHub:
https://github.com/mojombo/chronic
The best way to get your changes merged back into core is as follows:
- Clone down your fork
- Create a thoughtfully named topic branch to contain your change
- Hack away
- Add tests and make sure everything still passes by running
rake
- Ensure your tests pass in multiple timezones. ie
TZ=utc rake
TZ=BST rake
- If you are adding new functionality, document it in the README
- Do not change the version number, we will do that on our end
- If necessary, rebase your commits into logical chunks, without errors
- Push the branch up to GitHub
- Send a pull request for your branch