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Project: tense
License: Apache 2.0
About: Time Processing Tool
OS: Independent
Python: 3.9+
Typing: Typed
Topic: Utilities


Documentation · Report Bug · Request Feature

Table of Contents
  1. About The Project
  2. Getting Started
  3. Usage
  4. Examples
  5. Contributing
  6. License
  7. Contact
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Project history

About The Project

PyPi Mypy badge Black Supported python versions

Welcome

Have you ever needed to convert, for example, the string "1d1minute 2 sec" to the number of seconds or a datetime.timedelta object?

No? Then advise us to your friends :) And if you really need our tool - let's move on!

Getting started

With PyPi

$ pip3 install tense

With Poetry

$ poetry add tense

Usage

Built-in basic

import datetime
from tense import TenseParser

time_string = "1d2minutes 5 sec"

# <-- Digit parser -->
digit_parser = TenseParser(TenseParser.DIGIT)
assert digit_parser.parse(time_string) == 86525

# <-- Timedelta parser -->
delta_parser = TenseParser(TenseParser.TIMEDELTA)
delta_value = delta_parser.parse(time_string)
# <-- Assertions -->
assert isinstance(delta_value, datetime.timedelta)
assert str(delta_value) == "1 day, 0:02:05"

Reconfiguring existing settings

from tense import TenseParser, from_tense_file_source

config_emulation = """
[model.Tense]
multiplier = 2  # each unit of time will be multiplied by 2
# !!! Note: If the multiplier is <= 0, then the parsers will 
# not work correctly. In this case, a warning will be sent to the console.

[units.Minute]
duration = 120  # Why not?...
aliases = my_minute, my_minutes, my_min, my_mins
"""
parser = TenseParser(
    TenseParser.TIMEDELTA,
    tenses=from_tense_file_source(config_emulation),
)
delta_value = parser.parse("1 my_min 10my_mins 9  my_minutes")
assert str(delta_value) == "1:20:00"  # (each 120 * 2)

Adding new settings

from tense import TenseParser, from_tense_file_source

config_emulation = """
[model.Tense]  # This header is required.

[virtual]
duration = exp(year * 10)
aliases = decade, dec, decs, decades
"""

parser = TenseParser(
    TenseParser.TIMEDELTA,
    tenses=from_tense_file_source(config_emulation),
)
delta_value = parser.parse("1year 10 decades5   seconds")
assert str(delta_value) == "36865 days, 0:00:05"

FAQ

But what if you need to parse a string like: "1day and 10 minutes + 5 seconds"? Let's see:

>> > from tense import TenseParser

>> > complex_string = "1day and 10 minutes + 5 seconds"

>> > parser = TenseParser(TenseParser.TIMEDELTA)
>> > parser.parse(complex_string)
'0:00:05'

Wait... What? 5 second? But there are days and minutes...

  • It's okay, you're using flexible tense! This problem is solved in two ways:
    1. You write your own time_resolver and pass it
    2. Choose an existing one from tense.resolvers

Let's demonstrate! I will use the second option, since the built-in time resolvers in tense are suitable for me.

>> > from tense import TenseParser, resolvers

>> > complex_string = "1day and 10 minutes + 5 seconds"

>> > parser = TenseParser(TenseParser.TIMEDELTA, time_resolver=resolvers.smart_resolver)
>> > parser.parse(complex_string)
'1 day, 0:10:05'

Well, that's better!

tense.application.resolvers.smart_resolver() is also case insensitive!

>> > from tense import TenseParser, resolvers

>> > complex_string = "1DAY and 10 MINUTES + 5 SECONDS"

>> > parser = TenseParser(TenseParser.TIMEDELTA, time_resolver=resolvers.smart_resolver)
>> > parser.parse(complex_string)
'1 day, 0:10:05'

Examples.

If you think that this is where the possibilities of tense ends, then you are wrong! The possibilities of tense are too many for a README, so I suggest you move on to viewing the usage examples here:


Tense Examples

Contributing

Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are greatly appreciated.

If you have a suggestion that would make this better, please fork the repo and create a pull request. You can also simply open an issue with the tag "enhancement". Don't forget to give the project a star! Thanks again!

  1. Fork the Project
  2. Create your Feature Branch (git checkout -b feature/AmazingFeature)
  3. Commit your Changes (git commit -m 'Add some AmazingFeature')
  4. Push to the Branch (git push origin feature/AmazingFeature)
  5. Open a Pull Request

License

Distributed under the Apache 2.0 License. See LICENSE for more information.

Contact

Acknowledgments

History

Initially, the project was made asynchronous, which significantly slowed down the parsing process, because tense is a CPU-bound module.

By refactoring the project, we got a ~x22.31 speedup in processing complex strings (using smart_resolver).

Was: ~0.00095030...μs | Now: ~0.00004260...μs

And ~x38.28 speed up processing simple strings (using basic_resolver).

Was: ~0.00062400...μs | Now: ~0.00001630...μs

The previous (async) version is still available in the repository branches - https://github.com/Animatea/tense/tree/async-final, but the site with the documentation will be changed. Note that the package on PyPi will also remain in the public domain.