Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: datetoken
Version: 0.6.0
Summary: Convert relative string tokens into datetime objects
Home-page: https://pypi.org/project/datetoken/
Author: Marcos Sanchez
Author-email: marsanben92@gmail.com
Maintainer: Marcos Sanchez
Maintainer-email: marsanben92@gmail.com
License: MIT
Project-URL: Code, https://github.com/sonirico/datetoken/
Project-URL: Issue tracker, https://github.com/sonirico/datetoken/issues
Platform: any
Requires-Python: >=2.7,!=3.0.*,!=3.1.*,!=3.2.*,!=3.3.*
Provides-Extra: dev
Provides-Extra: docs
License-File: LICENSE

This package allows you to store complex relative dates in string tokens.

- **To define the initial/starting point in time** (typically written as `now`), to
  work with dates in the past or in the future. Ideal to perform date
  simulations.
- **Time zone configuration**. Additionally to the starting point in time, TZs
  can be provided to as to somehow abstract the user away from localizing
  *datetimes* objects in their apps.

  As a disclaimer, if the custom datetime specified as the starting point
  (`now`'s value) is tz-unaware or naive, it will be treated as an UTC one.
  Default `now`'s value also fallsback to `datetime.datetime.utcnow`, localized
  to UTC.

  Now, if a time zone is specified, the ``now``'s value will be coerced to that
  TZ prior to applying both snap and modifier expressions. This is handy
  to quickly resolve tokens given any point in time (either naive or aware), a
  time zone and the datetoken itself.

============
Motivation
============
Have you ever needed to make an application where dates needed to be
represented in a relative fashion, like background periodic
tasks, datetime range pickers... in a compact and stringified format? This
library enables you to persist these string tokens during the lifetime of a
process or even longer, since calculations are performed in the moment of
evaluation. Theses tokens are also useful when caching URLs as replacement
of timestamps, which would break caching given their mutability nature.

Some common examples of relative tokens:

-  Today: ``now/d``, ``now``
-  Yesterday: ``now-d/d``, ``now-d@d``
-  Last 24 hours: ``now-1d``, ``now``. Also writable as: ``now-24h``,
   ``now``
-  Last business week: ``now-w/bw``, ``now-w@bw``
-  This business week: ``now/bw``, ``now@bw``
-  Last month: ``now-1M/M``, ``now-1M@M``
-  Last year: ``now-1Y/Y``, ``now-1Y@Y``
-  Last month first business week: ``now-M/M+w/bw``, ``now-M/M+w@bw``

As you may have noticed, token follow a pattern:

-  The word ``now``. It means the point in the future timeline when
   tokens are parsed to their datetime form.
-  Optionally, modifiers to add and/or subtract the future value of
   ``now`` can be used. Unsurprisingly, additions are set via ``+``, while
   ``-`` mean subtractions. These modifiers can be chained as many times
   as needed. E.g: ``now-1M+3d+2h``. Along with the arithmetical sign
   and the amount, the unit of time the amount refers to must be
   specified. Currently, the supported units are:

   -  ``s`` seconds
   -  ``m`` minutes
   -  ``h`` hours
   -  ``d`` days
   -  ``w`` weeks
   -  ``M`` months
   -  ``Y`` years

-  Optionally, there exist two extra modifiers to snap dates to the
   start or the end of any given snapshot unit. Those are:

   -  ``/`` Snap the date to the start of the snapshot unit.
   -  ``@`` Snap the date to the end of the snapshot unit.

  Snapshot units are the same as arithmetical modifiers, plus the following
  ones:

  - ``bw``, business week
  - ``mon``, Monday
  - ``tue``, Tuesday
  - ``wed``, Wednesday
  - ``thu``, Thursday
  - ``fri``, Friday
  - ``sat``, Saturday
  - ``sun``, Sunday

  With this, we achieve a simple way to define canonical relative date ranges,
  such as *Today* or *Last month*. As an example of the later:

   -  String representation: ``now-1M/M``, ``now-1M@M``
   -  Being today *15 Jan 2018*, the result range should be: *2018-01-01
      00:00:00 / 2018-01-31 23:59:59*


Installing
----------

Install and update via either `pipenv`_ or `pip`_

.. code:: shell

    pipenv install datetoken

or

.. code:: shell

    pip install datetoken


Examples and usage
------------------

Most probably you will be dealing with simple presets such as
*yesterday* or the *last 24 hours*.

.. code:: python

   >>> from datetoken.utils import token_to_date
   >>> from datetime import datetime
   >>> print(datetime.utcnow())
   2018-10-18 14:08:47
   >>> token_to_date('now-d/d')  # Start of yesterday
   2018-10-17 00:00:00
   >>> token_to_date('now-d@d')  # End of yesterday
   2018-10-17 23:59:59

For more details, refer to `README`_.

.. _readme: https://github.com/sonirico/datetoken#datetoken--
.. _pipenv: https://pipenv.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
.. _pip: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/quickstart/


