Struct DateTimeRound
pub struct DateTimeRound { /* private fields */ }
dep_jiff
and alloc
only.Expand description
Options for DateTime::round
.
This type provides a way to configure the rounding of a civil datetime. In
particular, DateTime::round
accepts anything that implements the
Into<DateTimeRound>
trait. There are some trait implementations that
therefore make calling DateTime::round
in some common cases more
ergonomic:
From<Unit> for DateTimeRound
will construct a rounding configuration that rounds to the unit given. Specifically,DateTimeRound::new().smallest(unit)
.From<(Unit, i64)> for DateTimeRound
is like the one above, but also specifies the rounding increment forDateTimeRound::increment
.
Note that in the default configuration, no rounding occurs.
§Example
This example shows how to round a datetime to the nearest second:
use jiff::{civil::{DateTime, date}, Unit};
let dt: DateTime = "2024-06-20 16:24:59.5".parse()?;
assert_eq!(
dt.round(Unit::Second)?,
// The second rounds up and causes minutes to increase.
date(2024, 6, 20).at(16, 25, 0, 0),
);
The above makes use of the fact that Unit
implements
Into<DateTimeRound>
. If you want to change the rounding mode to, say,
truncation, then you’ll need to construct a DateTimeRound
explicitly
since there are no convenience Into
trait implementations for
RoundMode
.
use jiff::{civil::{DateTime, DateTimeRound, date}, RoundMode, Unit};
let dt: DateTime = "2024-06-20 16:24:59.5".parse()?;
assert_eq!(
dt.round(
DateTimeRound::new().smallest(Unit::Second).mode(RoundMode::Trunc),
)?,
// The second just gets truncated as if it wasn't there.
date(2024, 6, 20).at(16, 24, 59, 0),
);
Implementations§
§impl DateTimeRound
impl DateTimeRound
pub fn new() -> DateTimeRound
pub fn new() -> DateTimeRound
Create a new default configuration for rounding a DateTime
.
pub fn smallest(self, unit: Unit) -> DateTimeRound
pub fn smallest(self, unit: Unit) -> DateTimeRound
Set the smallest units allowed in the datetime returned after rounding.
Any units below the smallest configured unit will be used, along with
the rounding increment and rounding mode, to determine the value of the
smallest unit. For example, when rounding 2024-06-20T03:25:30
to the
nearest minute, the 30
second unit will result in rounding the minute
unit of 25
up to 26
and zeroing out everything below minutes.
This defaults to Unit::Nanosecond
.
§Errors
The smallest units must be no greater than Unit::Day
. And when the
smallest unit is Unit::Day
, the rounding increment must be equal to
1
. Otherwise an error will be returned from DateTime::round
.
§Example
use jiff::{civil::{DateTimeRound, date}, Unit};
let dt = date(2024, 6, 20).at(3, 25, 30, 0);
assert_eq!(
dt.round(DateTimeRound::new().smallest(Unit::Minute))?,
date(2024, 6, 20).at(3, 26, 0, 0),
);
// Or, utilize the `From<Unit> for DateTimeRound` impl:
assert_eq!(
dt.round(Unit::Minute)?,
date(2024, 6, 20).at(3, 26, 0, 0),
);
pub fn mode(self, mode: RoundMode) -> DateTimeRound
pub fn mode(self, mode: RoundMode) -> DateTimeRound
Set the rounding mode.
This defaults to RoundMode::HalfExpand
, which rounds away from
zero. It matches the kind of rounding you might have been taught in
school.
§Example
This shows how to always round datetimes up towards positive infinity.
use jiff::{civil::{DateTime, DateTimeRound, date}, RoundMode, Unit};
let dt: DateTime = "2024-06-20 03:25:01".parse()?;
assert_eq!(
dt.round(
DateTimeRound::new()
.smallest(Unit::Minute)
.mode(RoundMode::Ceil),
)?,
date(2024, 6, 20).at(3, 26, 0, 0),
);
pub fn increment(self, increment: i64) -> DateTimeRound
pub fn increment(self, increment: i64) -> DateTimeRound
Set the rounding increment for the smallest unit.
The default value is 1
. Other values permit rounding the smallest
unit to the nearest integer increment specified. For example, if the
smallest unit is set to Unit::Minute
, then a rounding increment of
30
would result in rounding in increments of a half hour. That is,
the only minute value that could result would be 0
or 30
.
§Errors
When the smallest unit is Unit::Day
, then the rounding increment must
be 1
or else DateTime::round
will return an error.
For other units, the rounding increment must divide evenly into the
next highest unit above the smallest unit set. The rounding increment
must also not be equal to the next highest unit. For example, if the
smallest unit is Unit::Nanosecond
, then some of the valid values
for the rounding increment are 1
, 2
, 4
, 5
, 100
and 500
.
Namely, any integer that divides evenly into 1,000
nanoseconds since
there are 1,000
nanoseconds in the next highest unit (microseconds).
§Example
This example shows how to round a datetime to the nearest 10 minute increment.
use jiff::{civil::{DateTime, DateTimeRound, date}, RoundMode, Unit};
let dt: DateTime = "2024-06-20 03:24:59".parse()?;
assert_eq!(
dt.round((Unit::Minute, 10))?,
date(2024, 6, 20).at(3, 20, 0, 0),
);
Trait Implementations§
§impl Clone for DateTimeRound
impl Clone for DateTimeRound
§fn clone(&self) -> DateTimeRound
fn clone(&self) -> DateTimeRound
1.0.0 · Source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source
. Read more§impl Debug for DateTimeRound
impl Debug for DateTimeRound
§impl Default for DateTimeRound
impl Default for DateTimeRound
§fn default() -> DateTimeRound
fn default() -> DateTimeRound
§impl From<(Unit, i64)> for DateTimeRound
impl From<(Unit, i64)> for DateTimeRound
§fn from(_: (Unit, i64)) -> DateTimeRound
fn from(_: (Unit, i64)) -> DateTimeRound
§impl From<Unit> for DateTimeRound
impl From<Unit> for DateTimeRound
§fn from(unit: Unit) -> DateTimeRound
fn from(unit: Unit) -> DateTimeRound
impl Copy for DateTimeRound
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl Freeze for DateTimeRound
impl RefUnwindSafe for DateTimeRound
impl Send for DateTimeRound
impl Sync for DateTimeRound
impl Unpin for DateTimeRound
impl UnwindSafe for DateTimeRound
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