Class: Time
Relationships & Source Files | |
Inherits: | Object |
Defined in: | lib/time.rb |
Constant Summary
-
CommonYearMonthDays =
Internal use only
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 144[31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31]
-
LeapYearMonthDays =
Internal use only
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 143[31, 29, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31]
-
MonthValue =
Internal use only
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 489{ # :nodoc: 'JAN' => 1, 'FEB' => 2, 'MAR' => 3, 'APR' => 4, 'MAY' => 5, 'JUN' => 6, 'JUL' => 7, 'AUG' => 8, 'SEP' => 9, 'OCT' =>10, 'NOV' =>11, 'DEC' =>12 }
-
VERSION =
Internal use only
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 30"0.4.1"
-
ZoneOffset =
Internal use only
A hash of timezones mapped to hour differences from UTC. The set of time zones corresponds to the ones specified by RFC 2822 and ISO 8601.
{ # :nodoc: 'UTC' => 0, # ISO 8601 'Z' => 0, # RFC 822 'UT' => 0, 'GMT' => 0, 'EST' => -5, 'EDT' => -4, 'CST' => -6, 'CDT' => -5, 'MST' => -7, 'MDT' => -6, 'PST' => -8, 'PDT' => -7, # Following definition of military zones is original one. # See RFC 1123 and RFC 2822 for the error in RFC 822. 'A' => +1, 'B' => +2, 'C' => +3, 'D' => +4, 'E' => +5, 'F' => +6, 'G' => +7, 'H' => +8, 'I' => +9, 'K' => +10, 'L' => +11, 'M' => +12, 'N' => -1, 'O' => -2, 'P' => -3, 'Q' => -4, 'R' => -5, 'S' => -6, 'T' => -7, 'U' => -8, 'V' => -9, 'W' => -10, 'X' => -11, 'Y' => -12, }
Class Method Summary
-
.httpdate(date)
Parses
date
as an HTTP-date defined by RFC 2616 and converts it to aTime
object. -
.iso8601(time)
Alias for .xmlschema.
-
.parse(date, now = self.now)
Takes a string representation of a
Time
and attempts to parse it using a heuristic. -
.rfc2822(date)
(also: .rfc822)
Parses
date
as date-time defined by RFC 2822 and converts it to aTime
object. -
.rfc822(date)
Alias for .rfc2822.
-
.strptime(date, format, now = self.now)
Works similar to .parse except that instead of using a heuristic to detect the format of the input string, you provide a second argument that describes the format of the string.
-
.xmlschema(time)
(also: .iso8601)
Parses
time
as a dateTime defined by the XML Schema and converts it to aTime
object. -
.zone_offset(zone, year = self.now.year)
Return the number of seconds the specified time zone differs from UTC.
- .apply_offset(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, off) Internal use only
- .force_zone!(t, zone, offset = nil) Internal use only
- .make_time(date, year, yday, mon, day, hour, min, sec, sec_fraction, zone, now) Internal use only
- .month_days(y, m) Internal use only
- .zone_utc?(zone) ⇒ Boolean Internal use only
Instance Method Summary
-
#httpdate
Returns a string which represents the time as RFC 1123 date of HTTP-date defined by RFC 2616:
-
#iso8601(fraction_digits = 0)
Alias for #xmlschema.
-
#rfc2822
(also: #rfc822)
Returns a string which represents the time as date-time defined by RFC 2822:
-
#rfc822
Alias for #rfc2822.
-
#xmlschema(fraction_digits = 0)
(also: #iso8601, #iso8601)
Returns a string which represents the time as a dateTime defined by XML Schema:
Class Method Details
.apply_offset(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, off)
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 154
def apply_offset(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, off) if off < 0 off = -off off, o = off.divmod(60) if o != 0 then sec += o; o, sec = sec.divmod(60); off += o end off, o = off.divmod(60) if o != 0 then min += o; o, min = min.divmod(60); off += o end off, o = off.divmod(24) if o != 0 then hour += o; o, hour = hour.divmod(24); off += o end if off != 0 day += off days = month_days(year, mon) if days and days < day mon += 1 if 12 < mon mon = 1 year += 1 end day = 1 end end elsif 0 < off off, o = off.divmod(60) if o != 0 then sec -= o; o, sec = sec.divmod(60); off -= o end off, o = off.divmod(60) if o != 0 then min -= o; o, min = min.divmod(60); off -= o end off, o = off.divmod(24) if o != 0 then hour -= o; o, hour = hour.divmod(24); off -= o end if off != 0 then day -= off if day < 1 mon -= 1 if mon < 1 year -= 1 mon = 12 end day = month_days(year, mon) end end end return year, mon, day, hour, min, sec end
.force_zone!(t, zone, offset = nil)
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 125
def force_zone!(t, zone, offset=nil) if zone_utc?(zone) t.utc elsif offset ||= zone_offset(zone) # Prefer the local timezone over the fixed offset timezone because # the former is a real timezone and latter is an artificial timezone. t.localtime if t.utc_offset != offset # Use the fixed offset timezone only if the local timezone cannot # represent the given offset. t.localtime(offset) end else t.localtime end end
.httpdate(date)
Parses date
as an HTTP-date defined by RFC 2616 and converts it to a Time
object.
ArgumentError is raised if date
is not compliant with RFC 2616 or if the Time
class cannot represent specified date.
See #httpdate for more information on this format.
require 'time'
Time.httpdate("Thu, 06 Oct 2011 02:26:12 GMT")
#=> 2011-10-06 02:26:12 UTC
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 569
def httpdate(date) if date.match?(/\A\s* (?:Mon|Tue|Wed|Thu|Fri|Sat|Sun),\x20 (\d{2})\x20 (Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec)\x20 (\d{4})\x20 (\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2})\x20 GMT \s*\z/ix) self.rfc2822(date).utc elsif /\A\s* (?:Monday|Tuesday|Wednesday|Thursday|Friday|Saturday|Sunday),\x20 (\d\d)-(Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec)-(\d\d)\x20 (\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)\x20 GMT \s*\z/ix =~ date year = $3.to_i if year < 50 year += 2000 else year += 1900 end self.utc(year, $2, $1.to_i, $4.to_i, $5.to_i, $6.to_i) elsif /\A\s* (?:Mon|Tue|Wed|Thu|Fri|Sat|Sun)\x20 (Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec)\x20 (\d\d|\x20\d)\x20 (\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)\x20 (\d{4}) \s*\z/ix =~ date self.utc($6.to_i, MonthValue[$1.upcase], $2.to_i, $3.to_i, $4.to_i, $5.to_i) else raise ArgumentError.new("not RFC 2616 compliant date: #{date.inspect}") end end
.iso8601(time)
Alias for .xmlschema.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 656
alias iso8601 xmlschema
.make_time(date, year, yday, mon, day, hour, min, sec, sec_fraction, zone, now)
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 198
def make_time(date, year, yday, mon, day, hour, min, sec, sec_fraction, zone, now) if !year && !yday && !mon && !day && !hour && !min && !sec && !sec_fraction raise ArgumentError, "no time information in #{date.inspect}" end off = nil if year || now off_year = year || now.year off = zone_offset(zone, off_year) if zone end if yday unless (1..366) === yday raise ArgumentError, "yday #{yday} out of range" end mon, day = (yday-1).divmod(31) mon += 1 day += 1 t = make_time(date, year, nil, mon, day, hour, min, sec, sec_fraction, zone, now) diff = yday - t.yday return t if diff.zero? day += diff if day > 28 and day > (mday = month_days(off_year, mon)) if (mon += 1) > 12 raise ArgumentError, "yday #{yday} out of range" end day -= mday end return make_time(date, year, nil, mon, day, hour, min, sec, sec_fraction, zone, now) end if now and now.respond_to?(:getlocal) if off now = now.getlocal(off) if now.utc_offset != off else now = now.getlocal end end usec = nil usec = sec_fraction * 1000000 if sec_fraction if now begin break if year; year = now.year break if mon; mon = now.mon break if day; day = now.day break if hour; hour = now.hour break if min; min = now.min break if sec; sec = now.sec break if sec_fraction; usec = now.tv_usec end until true end year ||= 1970 mon ||= 1 day ||= 1 hour ||= 0 min ||= 0 sec ||= 0 usec ||= 0 if year != off_year off = nil off = zone_offset(zone, year) if zone end if off year, mon, day, hour, min, sec = apply_offset(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, off) t = self.utc(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, usec) force_zone!(t, zone, off) t else self.local(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, usec) end end
.month_days(y, m)
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 145
def month_days(y, m) if ((y % 4 == 0) && (y % 100 != 0)) || (y % 400 == 0) LeapYearMonthDays[m-1] else CommonYearMonthDays[m-1] end end
.parse(date, now = self.now)
Takes a string representation of a Time
and attempts to parse it using a heuristic.
This method **does not** function as a validator. If the input string does not match valid formats strictly, you may get a cryptic result. Should consider to use .strptime instead of this method as possible.
require 'time'
Time.parse("2010-10-31") #=> 2010-10-31 00:00:00 -0500
Any missing pieces of the date are inferred based on the current date.
require 'time'
# assuming the current date is "2011-10-31"
Time.parse("12:00") #=> 2011-10-31 12:00:00 -0500
We can change the date used to infer our missing elements by passing a second object that responds to #mon
, #day
and #year
, such as Date, Time
or DateTime. We can also use our own object.
require 'time'
class MyDate
attr_reader :mon, :day, :year
def initialize(mon, day, year)
@mon, @day, @year = mon, day, year
end
end
d = Date.parse("2010-10-28")
t = Time.parse("2010-10-29")
dt = DateTime.parse("2010-10-30")
md = MyDate.new(10,31,2010)
Time.parse("12:00", d) #=> 2010-10-28 12:00:00 -0500
Time.parse("12:00", t) #=> 2010-10-29 12:00:00 -0500
Time.parse("12:00", dt) #=> 2010-10-30 12:00:00 -0500
Time.parse("12:00", md) #=> 2010-10-31 12:00:00 -0500
If a block is given, the year described in date
is converted by the block. This is specifically designed for handling two digit years. For example, if you wanted to treat all two digit years prior to 70 as the year 2000+ you could write this:
require 'time'
Time.parse("01-10-31") {|year| year + (year < 70 ? 2000 : 1900)}
#=> 2001-10-31 00:00:00 -0500
Time.parse("70-10-31") {|year| year + (year < 70 ? 2000 : 1900)}
#=> 1970-10-31 00:00:00 -0500
If the upper components of the given time are broken or missing, they are supplied with those of now
. For the lower components, the minimum values (1 or 0) are assumed if broken or missing. For example:
require 'time'
# Suppose it is "Thu Nov 29 14:33:20 2001" now and
# your time zone is EST which is GMT-5.
now = Time.parse("Thu Nov 29 14:33:20 2001")
Time.parse("16:30", now) #=> 2001-11-29 16:30:00 -0500
Time.parse("7/23", now) #=> 2001-07-23 00:00:00 -0500
Time.parse("Aug 31", now) #=> 2001-08-31 00:00:00 -0500
Time.parse("Aug 2000", now) #=> 2000-08-01 00:00:00 -0500
Since there are numerous conflicts among locally defined time zone abbreviations all over the world, this method is not intended to understand all of them. For example, the abbreviation “CST” is used variously as:
-06:00 in America/Chicago,
-05:00 in America/Havana,
+08:00 in Asia/Harbin,
+09:30 in Australia/Darwin,
+10:30 in Australia/Adelaide,
etc.
Based on this fact, this method only understands the time zone abbreviations described in RFC 822 and the system time zone, in the order named. (i.e. a definition in RFC 822 overrides the system time zone definition.) The system time zone is taken from Time.local(year, 1, 1).zone
and Time.local(year, 7, 1).zone
. If the extracted time zone abbreviation does not match any of them, it is ignored and the given time is regarded as a local time.
ArgumentError is raised if Date._parse
cannot extract information from date
or if the Time
class cannot represent specified date.
This method can be used as a fail-safe for other parsing methods as:
Time.rfc2822(date) rescue Time.parse(date)
Time.httpdate(date) rescue Time.parse(date)
Time.xmlschema(date) rescue Time.parse(date)
A failure of parse
should be checked, though.
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 382
def parse(date, now=self.now) comp = !block_given? d = Date._parse(date, comp) year = d[:year] year = yield(year) if year && !comp make_time(date, year, d[:yday], d[:mon], d[:mday], d[:hour], d[:min], d[:sec], d[:sec_fraction], d[:zone], now) end
.rfc2822(date) Also known as: .rfc822
Parses date
as date-time defined by RFC 2822 and converts it to a Time
object. The format is identical to the date format defined by RFC 822 and updated by RFC 1123.
ArgumentError is raised if date
is not compliant with RFC 2822 or if the Time
class cannot represent specified date.
See #rfc2822 for more information on this format.
require 'time'
Time.rfc2822("Wed, 05 Oct 2011 22:26:12 -0400")
#=> 2010-10-05 22:26:12 -0400
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 511
def rfc2822(date) if /\A\s* (?:(?:Mon|Tue|Wed|Thu|Fri|Sat|Sun)\s*,\s*)? (\d{1,2})\s+ (Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec)\s+ (\d{2,})\s+ (\d{2})\s* :\s*(\d{2}) (?:\s*:\s*(\d\d))?\s+ ([+-]\d{4}| UT|GMT|EST|EDT|CST|CDT|MST|MDT|PST|PDT|[A-IK-Z])/ix =~ date # Since RFC 2822 permit comments, the regexp has no right anchor. day = $1.to_i mon = MonthValue[$2.upcase] year = $3.to_i short_year_p = $3.length <= 3 hour = $4.to_i min = $5.to_i sec = $6 ? $6.to_i : 0 zone = $7 if short_year_p # following year completion is compliant with RFC 2822. year = if year < 50 2000 + year else 1900 + year end end off = zone_offset(zone) year, mon, day, hour, min, sec = apply_offset(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, off) t = self.utc(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec) force_zone!(t, zone, off) t else raise ArgumentError.new("not RFC 2822 compliant date: #{date.inspect}") end end
.rfc822(date)
Alias for .rfc2822.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 551
alias rfc822 rfc2822
.strptime(date, format, now = self.now)
Works similar to .parse except that instead of using a heuristic to detect the format of the input string, you provide a second argument that describes the format of the string.
Raises ArgumentError if the date or format is invalid.
If a block is given, the year described in date
is converted by the block. For example:
Time.strptime(...) {|y| y < 100 ? (y >= 69 ? y + 1900 : y + 2000) : y}
Below is a list of the formatting options:
- %a
-
The abbreviated weekday name (“Sun”)
- %A
-
The full weekday name (“Sunday”)
- %b
-
The abbreviated month name (“Jan”)
- %B
-
The full month name (“January”)
- %c
-
The preferred local date and time representation
- %C
-
Century (20 in 2009)
- %d
-
Day of the month (01..31)
- %D
-
Date (%m/%d/%y)
- %e
-
Day of the month, blank-padded ( 1..31)
- %F
-
Equivalent to %Y-%m-%d (the ISO 8601 date format)
- %g
-
The last two digits of the commercial year
- %G
-
The week-based year according to ISO-8601 (week 1 starts on Monday and includes January 4)
- %h
-
Equivalent to %b
- %H
-
Hour of the day, 24-hour clock (00..23)
- %I
-
Hour of the day, 12-hour clock (01..12)
- %j
-
Day of the year (001..366)
- %k
-
hour, 24-hour clock, blank-padded ( 0..23)
- %l
-
hour, 12-hour clock, blank-padded ( 0..12)
- %L
-
Millisecond of the second (000..999)
- %m
-
Month of the year (01..12)
- %M
-
Minute of the hour (00..59)
- %n
-
Newline (n)
- %N
-
Fractional seconds digits
- %p
-
Meridian indicator (“AM” or “PM”)
- %P
-
Meridian indicator (“am” or “pm”)
- %r
-
time, 12-hour (same as %I:%M:%S %p)
- %R
-
time, 24-hour (%H:%M)
- %s
-
Number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC.
- %S
-
Second of the minute (00..60)
- %t
-
Tab character (t)
- %T
-
time, 24-hour (%H:%M:%S)
- %u
-
Day of the week as a decimal, Monday being 1. (1..7)
- %U
-
Week number of the current year, starting with the first Sunday as the first day of the first week (00..53)
- %v
-
VMS date (%e-%b-%Y)
- %V
-
Week number of year according to ISO 8601 (01..53)
- %W
-
Week number of the current year, starting with the first Monday as the first day of the first week (00..53)
- %w
-
Day of the week (Sunday is 0, 0..6)
- %x
-
Preferred representation for the date alone, no time
- %X
-
Preferred representation for the time alone, no date
- %y
-
Year without a century (00..99)
- %Y
-
Year which may include century, if provided
- %z
-
Time zone as hour offset from UTC (e.g. +0900)
- %Z
-
Time zone name
- %%
-
Literal “%” character
- %+
-
date(1) (%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Z %Y)
require 'time'
Time.strptime("2000-10-31", "%Y-%m-%d") #=> 2000-10-31 00:00:00 -0500
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 459
def strptime(date, format, now=self.now) d = Date._strptime(date, format) raise ArgumentError, "invalid date or strptime format - '#{date}' '#{format}'" unless d if seconds = d[:seconds] if sec_fraction = d[:sec_fraction] usec = sec_fraction * 1000000 usec *= -1 if seconds < 0 else usec = 0 end t = Time.at(seconds, usec) if zone = d[:zone] force_zone!(t, zone) end else year = d[:year] year = yield(year) if year && block_given? yday = d[:yday] if (d[:cwyear] && !year) || ((d[:cwday] || d[:cweek]) && !(d[:mon] && d[:mday])) # make_time doesn't deal with cwyear/cwday/cweek return Date.strptime(date, format).to_time end if (d[:wnum0] || d[:wnum1]) && !yday && !(d[:mon] && d[:mday]) yday = Date.strptime(date, format).yday end t = make_time(date, year, yday, d[:mon], d[:mday], d[:hour], d[:min], d[:sec], d[:sec_fraction], d[:zone], now) end t end
.xmlschema(time) Also known as: .iso8601
Parses time
as a dateTime defined by the XML Schema and converts it to a Time
object. The format is a restricted version of the format defined by ISO 8601.
ArgumentError is raised if time
is not compliant with the format or if the Time
class cannot represent the specified time.
See #xmlschema for more information on this format.
require 'time'
Time.xmlschema("2011-10-05T22:26:12-04:00")
#=> 2011-10-05 22:26:12-04:00
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 623
def xmlschema(time) if /\A\s* (-?\d+)-(\d\d)-(\d\d) T (\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d) (\.\d+)? (Z|[+-]\d\d(?::?\d\d)?)? \s*\z/ix =~ time year = $1.to_i mon = $2.to_i day = $3.to_i hour = $4.to_i min = $5.to_i sec = $6.to_i usec = 0 if $7 usec = Rational($7) * 1000000 end if $8 zone = $8 off = zone_offset(zone) year, mon, day, hour, min, sec = apply_offset(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, off) t = self.utc(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, usec) force_zone!(t, zone, off) t else self.local(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, usec) end else raise ArgumentError.new("invalid xmlschema format: #{time.inspect}") end end
.zone_offset(zone, year = self.now.year)
Return the number of seconds the specified time zone differs from UTC.
Numeric time zones that include minutes, such as -10:00
or +1330
will work, as will simpler hour-only time zones like -10
or +13
.
Textual time zones listed in ZoneOffset are also supported.
If the time zone does not match any of the above, zone_offset
will check if the local time zone (both with and without potential Daylight Saving Time changes being in effect) matches zone
. Specifying a value for year
will change the year used to find the local time zone.
If zone_offset
is unable to determine the offset, nil will be returned.
require 'time'
Time.zone_offset("EST") #=> -18000
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 83
def zone_offset(zone, year=self.now.year) off = nil zone = zone.upcase if /\A([+-])(\d\d)(:?)(\d\d)(?:\3(\d\d))?\z/ =~ zone off = ($1 == '-' ? -1 : 1) * (($2.to_i * 60 + $4.to_i) * 60 + $5.to_i) elsif zone.match?(/\A[+-]\d\d\z/) off = zone.to_i * 3600 elsif ZoneOffset.include?(zone) off = ZoneOffset[zone] * 3600 elsif ((t = self.local(year, 1, 1)).zone.upcase == zone rescue false) off = t.utc_offset elsif ((t = self.local(year, 7, 1)).zone.upcase == zone rescue false) off = t.utc_offset end off end
.zone_utc?(zone) ⇒ Boolean
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 101
def zone_utc?(zone) # * +0000 # In RFC 2822, +0000 indicate a time zone at Universal Time. # Europe/Lisbon is "a time zone at Universal Time" in Winter. # Atlantic/Reykjavik is "a time zone at Universal Time". # Africa/Dakar is "a time zone at Universal Time". # So +0000 is a local time such as Europe/London, etc. # * GMT # GMT is used as a time zone abbreviation in Europe/London, # Africa/Dakar, etc. # So it is a local time. # # * -0000, -00:00 # In RFC 2822, -0000 the date-time contains no information about the # local time zone. # In RFC 3339, -00:00 is used for the time in UTC is known, # but the offset to local time is unknown. # They are not appropriate for specific time zone such as # Europe/London because time zone neutral, # So -00:00 and -0000 are treated as UTC. zone.match?(/\A(?:-00:00|-0000|-00|UTC|Z|UT)\z/i) end
Instance Method Details
#httpdate
Returns a string which represents the time as RFC 1123 date of HTTP-date defined by RFC 2616:
day-of-week, DD month-name CCYY hh:mm:ss GMT
Note that the result is always UTC (GMT).
require 'time'
t = Time.now
t.httpdate # => "Thu, 06 Oct 2011 02:26:12 GMT"
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 695
def httpdate getutc.strftime('%a, %d %b %Y %T GMT') end
#iso8601(fraction_digits = 0)
Alias for #xmlschema.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 730
alias iso8601 xmlschema unless method_defined?(:iso8601)
#rfc2822 Also known as: #rfc822
Returns a string which represents the time as date-time defined by RFC 2822:
day-of-week, DD month-name CCYY hh:mm:ss zone
where zone is [+-]hhmm.
If self
is a UTC time, -0000 is used as zone.
require 'time'
t = Time.now
t.rfc2822 # => "Wed, 05 Oct 2011 22:26:12 -0400"
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 675
def rfc2822 strftime('%a, %d %b %Y %T ') << (utc? ? '-0000' : strftime('%z')) end
#rfc822
Alias for #rfc2822.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 678
alias rfc822 rfc2822
#xmlschema(fraction_digits = 0) Also known as: #iso8601, #iso8601
Returns a string which represents the time as a dateTime defined by XML Schema:
CCYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssTZD
CCYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssTZD
where TZD is Z or [+-]hh:mm.
If self is a UTC time, Z is used as TZD. [+-]hh:mm is used otherwise.
fraction_digits
specifies a number of digits to use for fractional seconds. Its default value is 0.
require 'time'
t = Time.now
t.iso8601 # => "2011-10-05T22:26:12-04:00"
You must require ‘time’ to use this method.
# File 'lib/time.rb', line 721
def xmlschema(fraction_digits=0) fraction_digits = fraction_digits.to_i s = strftime("%FT%T") if fraction_digits > 0 s << strftime(".%#{fraction_digits}N") end s << (utc? ? 'Z' : strftime("%:z")) end