On Thursday, 23 October 2014 at 21:17:23 UTC, Jonathan M Davis
wrote:
On Thursday, 23 October 2014 at 11:13:26 UTC, Colin wrote:
Hi,
I'm looking for an easy way to parse a dates into a datetime
object.
Most of my dates will be of the form:
mmm dd, yyyy HH:MM AM|PM
So like: "May 30, 2014 12:12 PM"
I can easily write a regex or whatever to pull these out of
that one format, but it's not guaranteed they'll all be in the
one format and I may have to deal with others.
Is there a helper function that I'm missing that can parse
these dates? Maybe something similar to pythons
dateutil.parser [1] ?
If not maybe adding this function to std.datetime would be a
good project to undertake for myself...
[1] - https://labix.org/python-dateutil
std.datetime supports the ISO formats but, it does not
currently support generating or parsing custom strings for
dates or times. It's on my todo list (probably after splitting
std.datetime into a package), but I don't know exactly when I'm
going to get to it. The first step will be figuring out what
the format strings will look like, since what languages like C
do is a complete mess. I had a proposal on it that was
discussed a while ago, but it was too complicated. It'll
probably end up being something closer to this
http://pr.stewartsplace.org.uk/d/sutil/datetime_format.html
though I'm afraid that that approach as it's presented might
not be flexible enough. I'll probably need to do something like
add a templated function that returns a custom struct with the
values that you want so that you can get them effeiently to
build the string yourself in the cases where you need to do
something wacky enough that the normal custom string formatting
functions aren't flexible enough. Then leaving the normal
custom string format generating and parsing functions simpler
works better.
In any case, I intend to get to it, but I've been dreadfully
slow about it. It's the number one thing missing from
std.datetime. I'd prefer to do it myself, but there's certainly
no reason why someone else can't do it if they really want to.
- Jonathan M Davis
Ok, thanks for the informative reply Jonathan.
For now I'll go with parsing the few types of dates I may need,
and maybe port over in the future when you get to it.
Cheers!