github.com/MangoDowner/go-gm@v0.0.0-20180818020936-8baa2bd4408c/src/time/example_test.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5 package time_test 6 7 import ( 8 "fmt" 9 "time" 10 ) 11 12 func expensiveCall() {} 13 14 func ExampleDuration() { 15 t0 := time.Now() 16 expensiveCall() 17 t1 := time.Now() 18 fmt.Printf("The call took %v to run.\n", t1.Sub(t0)) 19 } 20 21 var c chan int 22 23 func handle(int) {} 24 25 func ExampleAfter() { 26 select { 27 case m := <-c: 28 handle(m) 29 case <-time.After(5 * time.Minute): 30 fmt.Println("timed out") 31 } 32 } 33 34 func ExampleSleep() { 35 time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond) 36 } 37 38 func statusUpdate() string { return "" } 39 40 func ExampleTick() { 41 c := time.Tick(1 * time.Minute) 42 for now := range c { 43 fmt.Printf("%v %s\n", now, statusUpdate()) 44 } 45 } 46 47 func ExampleMonth() { 48 _, month, day := time.Now().Date() 49 if month == time.November && day == 10 { 50 fmt.Println("Happy Go day!") 51 } 52 } 53 54 func ExampleDate() { 55 t := time.Date(2009, time.November, 10, 23, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC) 56 fmt.Printf("Go launched at %s\n", t.Local()) 57 // Output: Go launched at 2009-11-10 15:00:00 -0800 PST 58 } 59 60 func ExampleTime_Format() { 61 // Parse a time value from a string in the standard Unix format. 62 t, err := time.Parse(time.UnixDate, "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015") 63 if err != nil { // Always check errors even if they should not happen. 64 panic(err) 65 } 66 67 // time.Time's Stringer method is useful without any format. 68 fmt.Println("default format:", t) 69 70 // Predefined constants in the package implement common layouts. 71 fmt.Println("Unix format:", t.Format(time.UnixDate)) 72 73 // The time zone attached to the time value affects its output. 74 fmt.Println("Same, in UTC:", t.UTC().Format(time.UnixDate)) 75 76 // The rest of this function demonstrates the properties of the 77 // layout string used in the format. 78 79 // The layout string used by the Parse function and Format method 80 // shows by example how the reference time should be represented. 81 // We stress that one must show how the reference time is formatted, 82 // not a time of the user's choosing. Thus each layout string is a 83 // representation of the time stamp, 84 // Jan 2 15:04:05 2006 MST 85 // An easy way to remember this value is that it holds, when presented 86 // in this order, the values (lined up with the elements above): 87 // 1 2 3 4 5 6 -7 88 // There are some wrinkles illustrated below. 89 90 // Most uses of Format and Parse use constant layout strings such as 91 // the ones defined in this package, but the interface is flexible, 92 // as these examples show. 93 94 // Define a helper function to make the examples' output look nice. 95 do := func(name, layout, want string) { 96 got := t.Format(layout) 97 if want != got { 98 fmt.Printf("error: for %q got %q; expected %q\n", layout, got, want) 99 return 100 } 101 fmt.Printf("%-15s %q gives %q\n", name, layout, got) 102 } 103 104 // Print a header in our output. 105 fmt.Printf("\nFormats:\n\n") 106 107 // A simple starter example. 108 do("Basic", "Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 MST 2006", "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015") 109 110 // For fixed-width printing of values, such as the date, that may be one or 111 // two characters (7 vs. 07), use an _ instead of a space in the layout string. 112 // Here we print just the day, which is 2 in our layout string and 7 in our 113 // value. 114 do("No pad", "<2>", "<7>") 115 116 // An underscore represents a zero pad, if required. 117 do("Spaces", "<_2>", "< 7>") 118 119 // Similarly, a 0 indicates zero padding. 120 do("Zeros", "<02>", "<07>") 121 122 // If the value is already the right width, padding is not used. 123 // For instance, the second (05 in the reference time) in our value is 39, 124 // so it doesn't need padding, but the minutes (04, 06) does. 125 do("Suppressed pad", "04:05", "06:39") 126 127 // The predefined constant Unix uses an underscore to pad the day. 128 // Compare with our simple starter example. 129 do("Unix", time.UnixDate, "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015") 130 131 // The hour of the reference time is 15, or 3PM. The layout can express 132 // it either way, and since our value is the morning we should see it as 133 // an AM time. We show both in one format string. Lower case too. 134 do("AM/PM", "3PM==3pm==15h", "11AM==11am==11h") 135 136 // When parsing, if the seconds value is followed by a decimal point 137 // and some digits, that is taken as a fraction of a second even if 138 // the layout string does not represent the fractional second. 139 // Here we add a fractional second to our time value used above. 140 t, err = time.Parse(time.UnixDate, "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39.1234 PST 2015") 141 if err != nil { 142 panic(err) 143 } 144 // It does not appear in the output if the layout string does not contain 145 // a representation of the fractional second. 146 do("No fraction", time.UnixDate, "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015") 147 148 // Fractional seconds can be printed by adding a run of 0s or 9s after 149 // a decimal point in the seconds value in the layout string. 150 // If the layout digits are 0s, the fractional second is of the specified 151 // width. Note that the output has a trailing zero. 152 do("0s for fraction", "15:04:05.00000", "11:06:39.12340") 153 154 // If the fraction in the layout is 9s, trailing zeros are dropped. 155 do("9s for fraction", "15:04:05.99999999", "11:06:39.1234") 156 157 // Output: 158 // default format: 2015-03-07 11:06:39 -0800 PST 159 // Unix format: Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015 160 // Same, in UTC: Sat Mar 7 19:06:39 UTC 2015 161 // 162 // Formats: 163 // 164 // Basic "Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 MST 2006" gives "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015" 165 // No pad "<2>" gives "<7>" 166 // Spaces "<_2>" gives "< 7>" 167 // Zeros "<02>" gives "<07>" 168 // Suppressed pad "04:05" gives "06:39" 169 // Unix "Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 MST 2006" gives "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015" 170 // AM/PM "3PM==3pm==15h" gives "11AM==11am==11h" 171 // No fraction "Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 MST 2006" gives "Sat Mar 7 11:06:39 PST 2015" 172 // 0s for fraction "15:04:05.00000" gives "11:06:39.12340" 173 // 9s for fraction "15:04:05.99999999" gives "11:06:39.1234" 174 175 } 176 177 func ExampleParse() { 178 // See the example for time.Format for a thorough description of how 179 // to define the layout string to parse a time.Time value; Parse and 180 // Format use the same model to describe their input and output. 181 182 // longForm shows by example how the reference time would be represented in 183 // the desired layout. 184 const longForm = "Jan 2, 2006 at 3:04pm (MST)" 185 t, _ := time.Parse(longForm, "Feb 3, 2013 at 7:54pm (PST)") 186 fmt.Println(t) 187 188 // shortForm is another way the reference time would be represented 189 // in the desired layout; it has no time zone present. 190 // Note: without explicit zone, returns time in UTC. 191 const shortForm = "2006-Jan-02" 192 t, _ = time.Parse(shortForm, "2013-Feb-03") 193 fmt.Println(t) 194 195 // Output: 196 // 2013-02-03 19:54:00 -0800 PST 197 // 2013-02-03 00:00:00 +0000 UTC 198 } 199 200 func ExampleParseInLocation() { 201 loc, _ := time.LoadLocation("Europe/Berlin") 202 203 const longForm = "Jan 2, 2006 at 3:04pm (MST)" 204 t, _ := time.ParseInLocation(longForm, "Jul 9, 2012 at 5:02am (CEST)", loc) 205 fmt.Println(t) 206 207 // Note: without explicit zone, returns time in given location. 208 const shortForm = "2006-Jan-02" 209 t, _ = time.ParseInLocation(shortForm, "2012-Jul-09", loc) 210 fmt.Println(t) 211 212 // Output: 213 // 2012-07-09 05:02:00 +0200 CEST 214 // 2012-07-09 00:00:00 +0200 CEST 215 } 216 217 func ExampleTime_Round() { 218 t := time.Date(0, 0, 0, 12, 15, 30, 918273645, time.UTC) 219 round := []time.Duration{ 220 time.Nanosecond, 221 time.Microsecond, 222 time.Millisecond, 223 time.Second, 224 2 * time.Second, 225 time.Minute, 226 10 * time.Minute, 227 time.Hour, 228 } 229 230 for _, d := range round { 231 fmt.Printf("t.Round(%6s) = %s\n", d, t.Round(d).Format("15:04:05.999999999")) 232 } 233 // Output: 234 // t.Round( 1ns) = 12:15:30.918273645 235 // t.Round( 1µs) = 12:15:30.918274 236 // t.Round( 1ms) = 12:15:30.918 237 // t.Round( 1s) = 12:15:31 238 // t.Round( 2s) = 12:15:30 239 // t.Round( 1m0s) = 12:16:00 240 // t.Round( 10m0s) = 12:20:00 241 // t.Round(1h0m0s) = 12:00:00 242 } 243 244 func ExampleTime_Truncate() { 245 t, _ := time.Parse("2006 Jan 02 15:04:05", "2012 Dec 07 12:15:30.918273645") 246 trunc := []time.Duration{ 247 time.Nanosecond, 248 time.Microsecond, 249 time.Millisecond, 250 time.Second, 251 2 * time.Second, 252 time.Minute, 253 10 * time.Minute, 254 } 255 256 for _, d := range trunc { 257 fmt.Printf("t.Truncate(%5s) = %s\n", d, t.Truncate(d).Format("15:04:05.999999999")) 258 } 259 // To round to the last midnight in the local timezone, create a new Date. 260 midnight := time.Date(t.Year(), t.Month(), t.Day(), 0, 0, 0, 0, time.Local) 261 _ = midnight 262 263 // Output: 264 // t.Truncate( 1ns) = 12:15:30.918273645 265 // t.Truncate( 1µs) = 12:15:30.918273 266 // t.Truncate( 1ms) = 12:15:30.918 267 // t.Truncate( 1s) = 12:15:30 268 // t.Truncate( 2s) = 12:15:30 269 // t.Truncate( 1m0s) = 12:15:00 270 // t.Truncate(10m0s) = 12:10:00 271 }