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go-date

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The go-date package provides a dedicated Date{} struct to emulate the standard library time.Time{} behavior.

API

This package provides helpers for:

  • conversion: ToTime(), date.FromTime(), date.FromString()
  • serialization: text, JSON, and SQL
  • emulating time.Time{}: After(), Before(), Sub(), etc.
  • explicit null handling: NullDate{} and an analog of sql.NullTime{}
  • emulating time helpers: Today() as an analog of time.Now()

Background

The Go standard library contains no native type for dates without times. Instead, common convention is to use a time.Time{} with only the year, month, and day set. For example, this convention is followed when a timestamp of the form YYYY-MM-DD is parsed via time.Parse(time.DateOnly, value).

Conversion

For cases where existing code produces a "conventional" time.Date(YYYY, MM, DD, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC) value, it can be validated and converted to a Date{} via:

t := time.Date(2024, time.March, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC)
d, err := date.FromTime(t)
fmt.Println(d, err)
// 2024-03-01 <nil>

If there is any deviation from the "conventional" format, this will error. For example:

timestamp contains more than just date information; 2020-05-11T01:00:00Z
timestamp contains more than just date information; 2022-01-31T00:00:00-05:00

For cases where we have a discrete timestamp (e.g. "last updated datetime") and a relevant timezone for a given request, we can extract the date within that timezone:

t := time.Date(2023, time.April, 14, 3, 55, 4, 777000100, time.UTC)
tz, _ := time.LoadLocation("America/Chicago")
d := date.InTimezone(t, tz)
fmt.Println(d)
// 2023-04-13

For conversion in the other direction, a Date{} can be converted back into a time.Time{}:

d := date.NewDate(2017, time.July, 3)
t := d.ToTime()
fmt.Println(t)
// 2017-07-03 00:00:00 +0000 UTC

By default this will use the "conventional" format, but any of the values (other than year, month, day) can also be set:

d := date.NewDate(2017, time.July, 3)
tz, _ := time.LoadLocation("America/Chicago")
t := d.ToTime(date.OptConvertHour(12), date.OptConvertTimezone(tz))
fmt.Println(t)
// 2017-07-03 12:00:00 -0500 CDT

Equivalent methods

There are a number of methods from time.Time{} that directly translate over:

d := date.NewDate(2020, time.February, 29)
fmt.Println(d.Year)
// 2020
fmt.Println(d.Month)
// February
fmt.Println(d.Day)
// 29
fmt.Println(d.ISOWeek())
// 2020 9
fmt.Println(d.Weekday())
// Saturday
fmt.Println(d.YearDay())
// 60
fmt.Println(d.Date())
// 2020 February 29

fmt.Println(d.IsZero())
// false
fmt.Println(d.String())
// 2020-02-29
fmt.Println(d.Format("Jan 2006"))
// Feb 2020
fmt.Println(d.GoString())
// date.NewDate(2020, time.February, 29)

d2 := date.NewDate(2021, time.February, 28)
fmt.Println(d2.Equal(d))
// false
fmt.Println(d2.Before(d))
// false
fmt.Println(d2.After(d))
// true
fmt.Println(d2.Compare(d))
// 1

However, some methods translate over only approximately. For example, it's much more natural for Sub() to return the number of days between two dates:

d := date.NewDate(2020, time.February, 29)
d2 := date.NewDate(2021, time.February, 28)
fmt.Println(d2.Sub(d))
// 365

Divergent methods

We've elected to translate the time.Time{}.AddDate() method rather than providing it directly:

d := date.NewDate(2020, time.February, 29)
fmt.Println(d.AddDays(1))
// 2020-03-01
fmt.Println(d.AddDays(100))
// 2020-06-08
fmt.Println(d.AddMonths(1))
// 2020-03-29
fmt.Println(d.AddMonths(3))
// 2020-05-29
fmt.Println(d.AddYears(1))
// 2021-02-28

This is in part because of the behavior of the standard library's AddDate(). In particular, it "overflows" a target month if the number of days in that month is less than the number of desired days. As a result, we provide *Stdlib() variants of the date addition helpers:

d := date.NewDate(2020, time.February, 29)
fmt.Println(d.AddMonths(12))
// 2021-02-28
fmt.Println(d.AddMonthsStdlib(12))
// 2021-03-01
fmt.Println(d.AddYears(1))
// 2021-02-28
fmt.Println(d.AddYearsStdlib(1))
// 2021-03-01

In the same line of thinking as the divergent AddMonths() behavior, a MonthEnd() method is provided that can pinpoint the number of days in the current month:

d := date.NewDate(2022, time.January, 14)
fmt.Println(d.MonthEnd())
// 2022-01-31
fmt.Println(d.MonthStart())
// 2022-01-01

Integrating with sqlc

Out of the box, the sqlc library uses a Go time.Time{} both for columns of type TIMESTAMPTZ and DATE. When reading DATE values (which come over the wire in the form YYYY-MM-DD), the Go standard library produces values of the form:

time.Date(YYYY, MM, DD, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC)

Instead, we can instruct sqlc to globally use date.Date and date.NullDate when parsing DATE columns:

---
version: "2"
overrides:
  go:
    overrides:
      - go_type:
          import: github.com/hardfinhq/go-date
          package: date
          type: NullDate
        db_type: date
        nullable: true
      - go_type:
          import: github.com/hardfinhq/go-date
          package: date
          type: Date
        db_type: date
        nullable: false

Alternatives

This package is intended to be simple to understand and only needs to cover "modern" dates (i.e. dates between 1900 and 2100). As a result, the core Date{} struct directly exposes the year, month, and day as fields.

There are several alternative date packages which cover wider date ranges. (These packages all use the proleptic Gregorian calendar to cover the historical date ranges.) Some existing packages:

Additionally, there is a Date{} type provided by the github.com/jackc/pgtype package that is part of the pgx ecosystem. However, this type is very focused on being useful for database serialization and deserialization and doesn't implement a wider set of methods present on time.Time{} (e.g. After()).

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Native type for dealing with dates in Go

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