A Rust crate for parsing human-readable relative time strings and human-readable datetime strings and converting them to a DateTime
.
- Parses a variety of human-readable and standard time formats.
- Supports positive and negative durations.
- Allows for chaining time units (e.g., "1 hour 2 minutes" or "2 days and 2 hours").
- Calculate durations relative to a specified date.
- Relies on Chrono
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
parse_datetime = "0.5.0"
Then, import the crate and use the parse_datetime_at_date
function:
use chrono::{Duration, Local};
use parse_datetime::parse_datetime_at_date;
let now = Local::now();
let after = parse_datetime_at_date(now, "+3 days");
assert_eq!(
(now + Duration::days(3)).naive_utc(),
after.unwrap().naive_utc()
);
For DateTime parsing, import the parse_datetime
function:
use parse_datetime::parse_datetime;
use chrono::{Local, TimeZone};
let dt = parse_datetime("2021-02-14 06:37:47");
assert_eq!(dt.unwrap(), Local.with_ymd_and_hms(2021, 2, 14, 6, 37, 47).unwrap());
The parse_datetime
and parse_datetime_at_date
functions support absolute datetime and the following relative times:
num
unit
(e.g., "-1 hour", "+3 days")unit
(e.g., "hour", "day")- "now" or "today"
- "yesterday"
- "tomorrow"
- use "ago" for the past
- use "next" or "last" with
unit
(e.g., "next week", "last year") - combined units with "and" or "," (e.g., "2 years and 1 month", "1 day, 2 hours" or "2 weeks 1 second")
- unix timestamps (for example "@0" "@1344000")
num
can be a positive or negative integer.
unit
can be one of the following: "fortnight", "week", "day", "hour", "minute", "min", "second", "sec" and their plural forms.
The parse_datetime
and parse_datetime_at_date
function return:
Ok(DateTime<FixedOffset>)
- If the input string can be parsed as a datetimeErr(ParseDateTimeError::InvalidInput)
- If the input string cannot be parsed
To run the fuzzer:
$ cd fuzz
$ cargo install cargo-fuzz
$ cargo +nightly fuzz run fuzz_parse_datetime
This project is licensed under the MIT License.
At some point, this crate was called humantime_to_duration. It has been renamed to cover more cases.