Elixir v1.4.2 Calendar.ISO View Source
A calendar implementation that follows to ISO8601.
This calendar implements the proleptic Gregorian calendar and is therefore compatible with the calendar used in most countries today. The proleptic means the Gregorian rules for leap years are applied for all time, consequently the dates give different results before the year 1583 from when the Gregorian calendar was adopted.
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Converts the given date into a string
Convers the datetime (with time zone) into a string
Calculates the day of the week from the given year
, month
, and day
Returns how many days there are in the given year-month
Returns if the given year is a leap year
Converts the datetime (without time zone) into a string
Link to this section Types
Link to this section Functions
Converts the given date into a string.
Convers the datetime (with time zone) into a string.
Calculates the day of the week from the given year
, month
, and day
.
It is an integer from 1 to 7, where 1 is Monday and 7 is Sunday.
Examples
iex> Calendar.ISO.day_of_week(2016, 10, 31)
1
iex> Calendar.ISO.day_of_week(2016, 11, 01)
2
iex> Calendar.ISO.day_of_week(2016, 11, 02)
3
iex> Calendar.ISO.day_of_week(2016, 11, 03)
4
iex> Calendar.ISO.day_of_week(2016, 11, 04)
5
iex> Calendar.ISO.day_of_week(2016, 11, 05)
6
iex> Calendar.ISO.day_of_week(2016, 11, 06)
7
Returns how many days there are in the given year-month.
Examples
iex> Calendar.ISO.days_in_month(1900, 1)
31
iex> Calendar.ISO.days_in_month(1900, 2)
28
iex> Calendar.ISO.days_in_month(2000, 2)
29
iex> Calendar.ISO.days_in_month(2001, 2)
28
iex> Calendar.ISO.days_in_month(2004, 2)
29
iex> Calendar.ISO.days_in_month(2004, 4)
30
Returns if the given year is a leap year.
Examples
iex> Calendar.ISO.leap_year?(2000)
true
iex> Calendar.ISO.leap_year?(2001)
false
iex> Calendar.ISO.leap_year?(2004)
true
iex> Calendar.ISO.leap_year?(1900)
false
Converts the datetime (without time zone) into a string.