Go to file
Bradlee Speice ef3ea38834 Release version 1.0.3 2018-09-18 23:04:07 -04:00
ci Test adding WASM support 2018-08-14 21:53:35 -04:00
examples Add a custom parsing example in Russian 2018-08-03 23:40:54 -04:00
src Remove a last println and use a static default parser 2018-09-17 23:14:50 -04:00
.gitignore Test adding WASM support 2018-08-14 21:53:35 -04:00
.travis.yml Fix target name 2018-08-14 22:38:05 -04:00
CHANGELOG.md Release version 1.0.3 2018-09-18 23:04:07 -04:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Remove fuzzing, add CONTRIBUTING/CONTRIBUTORS 2018-07-24 22:41:56 -04:00
CONTRIBUTORS.md Add one final CONTRIBUTOR 2018-08-03 23:43:24 -04:00
Cargo.toml Release version 1.0.3 2018-09-18 23:04:07 -04:00
LICENSE Licensing/docs updates 2018-06-17 23:31:25 -04:00
README.md Now with 100% more WASM! 2018-08-14 22:49:24 -04:00
appveyor.yml Get some new CI set up 2018-08-03 21:48:09 -04:00
build_pycompat.py Remove a last println and use a static default parser 2018-09-17 23:14:50 -04:00
build_pycompat_tokenizer.py Remove a last println and use a static default parser 2018-09-17 23:14:50 -04:00

README.md

dtparse

travisci appveyor crates.io docs.rs

The fully-featured "even I couldn't understand that" time parser. Designed to take in strings and give back sensible dates and times.

dtparse has its foundations in the dateutil library for Python, which excels at taking "interesting" strings and trying to make sense of the dates and times they contain. A couple of quick examples from the test cases should give some context:

extern crate chrono;
extern crate dtparse;
use chrono::prelude::*;
use dtparse::parse;

assert_eq!(
    parse("2008.12.30"),
    Ok((NaiveDate::from_ymd(2008, 12, 30).and_hms(0, 0, 0), None))
);

// It can even handle timezones!
assert_eq!(
    parse("January 4, 2024; 18:30:04 +02:00"),
    Ok((
        NaiveDate::from_ymd(2024, 1, 4).and_hms(18, 30, 4),
        Some(FixedOffset::east(7200))
    ))
);

And we can even handle fuzzy strings where dates/times aren't the only content if we dig into the implementation a bit!

extern crate chrono;
extern crate dtparse;
use chrono::prelude::*;
use dtparse::Parser;
use std::collections::HashMap;

let mut p = Parser::default();
assert_eq!(
    p.parse(
        "I first released this library on the 17th of June, 2018.",
        None, None,
        true /* turns on fuzzy mode */,
        true /* gives us the tokens that weren't recognized */,
        None, false, &HashMap::new()
    ),
    Ok((
        NaiveDate::from_ymd(2018, 6, 17).and_hms(0, 0, 0),
        None,
        Some(vec!["I first released this library on the ",
                  " of ", ", "].iter().map(|&s| s.into()).collect())
    ))
);

Further examples can be found in the examples directory on international usage.

Usage

dtparse requires a minimum Rust version of 1.21 to build, but is tested on Windows, OSX, BSD, Linux, and WASM. The build is also compiled against the iOS and Android SDK's, but is not tested against them.