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@hkjeffchan/moment-recur-ts

v1.5.0

Published

A momentjs plugin for matching and generating recurring dates.

Downloads

7

Readme

moment-recur-ts

No Maintenance Intended

I've switched over to rrule module for recurrence calculations.

This is a fork and conversion of the moment-recur library into TypeScript.

It adds additional features and improved performance.

Online documentation

npm version Build Status Coverage Status Greenkeeper badge

Original work is c-trimm/moment-recur

moment-recur-ts is a recurring date plugin for momentjs. This plugin handles dates only; time information is discarded.

The rule matching concept is borrowed from the excellent node-date-recur library created by Andrew Chilton.

let interval = moment('01/01/2014')
  .recur()
  .every(2)
  .days()
interval.matches('01/03/2014') // true

let calendar = moment
  .recur()
  .every(10)
  .dayOfMonth()
calendar.matches('05/10/2014') // true

Getting Started

moment-recur-ts can be included in your project a few different ways.

node.js

moment-recur-ts can be installed with npm and required into a script.

npm install moment-recur-ts
or
yarn add moment-recur-ts
let moment = require('moment')
require('moment-recur-ts')

Webpack + ES6/TypeScript

import * as moment from 'moment'
import 'moment-recur-ts'

Browser

Simply include the momentjs script, then the moment-recur-ts script.

<script src="moment.min.js"></script>
<script src="moment-recur-ts.min.js"></script>

Polyfills

moment-recur-ts uses newer Javascript ES6 features and may require a polyfill library for older browsers or node.js < 7.

<script src="https://unpkg.com/moment/min/moment.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/moment-recur-ts/dist/moment-recur-ts.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/core-js/client/core.min.js"></script>
require('core-js')
let moment = require('moment')
require('moment-recur-ts')

Creating a Recurring Date

You can create a recurrence from an instance of moment or from the constructor a few different ways.

From an instance:

let recurrence

// Create a recurrence using today as the start date.
recurrence = moment().recur()

// Create a recurrence while passing the start and end dates to the recur function.
// Note: passing an end date requires you to also pass a start date.
recurrence = moment().recur(start, end)

// You may pass a start date to the moment, or use an existing moment, to set the start date.
// In this case, passing a date to the recur function sets and end date.
recurrence = moment(start).recur(end)

// Finally, you can create a recurrence and pass in an entire set of options.
recurrence = moment().recur({
  start: '01/01/2014',
  end: '01/01/2015'
})

From the constructor:

let recurrence

// Create recurrence without a start date. Note: this will not work with intervals.
recurrence = moment.recur()

// Create a recurrence, passing just the start, or the start and end dates.
recurrence = moment.recur(start, end)

// Create a recurrence, passing set of options.
recurrence = moment.recur({
  start: '01/01/2014',
  end: '01/01/2015'
})

Creating Rules

moment-recur-ts uses rules to define when a date should recur. You can then generate future or past recurrences based on these rules, or see if a specific date matches the rules. Rules can also be overridden or removed.

The every() Function

The every() function allows you to set the units and, optionally, the measurment type of the recurring date. It returns the recur object to allow chaining.

let myDate, recurrence

// Create a date to start from
myDate = moment('01/01/2014')

// You can pass the units to recur on, and the measurement type.
recurrence = myDate.recur().every(1, 'days')

// You can also chain the measurement type instead of passing it to every.
recurrence = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(1)
  .day()

// It is also possible to pass an array of units.
recurrence = myDate
  .recur()
  .every([3, 5])
  .days()

// When using the dayOfWeek measurement, you can pass days names.
recurrence = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(['Monday', 'wed'])
  .daysOfWeek()

// Month names also work when using monthOfYear.
recurrence = myDate.recur().every(['Jan', 'february'], 'monthsOfYear')

every() will override the last "every" if a measurement was not provided. The following line will create a recurrence for every 5 days.

recurrence = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(1)
  .every(5)
  .days()

If you need to specify multiple units, pass an array to every().

You may also pass the units directly to the interval functions (listed below) instead of using every().

let recurrence = moment.recur().monthOfYear('January')

Length Intervals

moment-recur-ts supports intervals for days, weeks, months, and years. Measurements may be singular or plural (ex: day() vs days()). Length Intervals must have a start date defined.

Possible Length Intervals Include:

  • day / days
  • week / weeks
  • month / months
  • year / years

Examples

let myDate, interval

// Create a date to start from
myDate = moment('01/01/2014')

// A daily interval - will match every day.
interval = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(1)
  .day()

// A bi-weekly interval - will match any date that is exactly 2 weeks from myDate.
interval = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(2)
  .weeks()

// A quarterly interval - will match any date that is exactly 3 months from myDate.
interval = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(3)
  .months()

// A yearly interval - will match any date that is exactly 1 year from myDate.
interval = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(1)
  .years()

// It is possible to match multiple units of a single measure using an array.
interval = myDate
  .recur()
  .every([3, 5])
  .days()

// It is NOT possible to create compound intervals. The following will never match.
interval = myDate
  .recur()
  .every(3)
  .days()
  .every(2)
  .months() // Won't work

Calendar Intervals

Calendar Intervals do not depend on a start date. They define a unit of another unit. For instance, a day of a month, or a month of a year. Measurements may be singular or plural (ex: dayOfMonth() vs daysOfMonth()).

Possible Calendar Intervals Include:

  • dayOfWeek / daysOfWeek
  • dayOfMonth / daysOfMonth
  • weekOfMonth / weeksOfMonth
  • weekOfYear / weeksOfYear
  • monthOfYear / monthsOfYear

Examples

let cal

// Will match any date that is on Sunday or Monday.
cal = moment
  .recur()
  .every(['Sunday', 1])
  .daysOfWeek()

// Will match any date that is the first or tenth day of any month.
cal = moment
  .recur()
  .every([1, 10])
  .daysOfMonth()

// Will match any date that is in the first or third week of any month.
cal = moment
  .recur()
  .every([1, 3])
  .weeksOfMonth()

// Will match any date that is in the 20th week of any year.
cal = moment
  .recur()
  .every(20)
  .weekOfYear()

// Will match any date that is in January of any year.
cal = moment
  .recur()
  .every('January')
  .monthsOfYear()

// You can also combine these rules to match specific dates.
// For instance, this will match only on Valentines day
let valentines = moment
  .recur()
  .every(14)
  .daysOfMonth()
  .every('Februray')
  .monthsOfYear()

// A weekOfMonthByDay interval is available for combining with
// the daysOfWeek to achieve "nth weekday of month" recurrences.
// The following matches every 1st and 3rd Thursday of the month.
// (Note this cannot be combined at the moment with every(x).months() expression)
cal = moment
  .recur()
  .every('Thursday')
  .daysOfWeek()
  .every([0, 2])
  .weeksOfMonthByDay()

cal = moment
  .recur()
  .every(moment('01/01/2014').day())
  .daysOfWeek()
  .every(moment('01/01/2014').monthWeekByDay())
  .weeksOfMonthByDay()

Using the Rules

Matching

The matches() function will test a date to check if all of the recurrence rules match. It returns true if the date matches, false otherwise.

let interval = moment('01/01/2014')
  .recur()
  .every(2)
  .days()
interval.matches('01/02/2014') // false
interval.matches('01/03/2014') // true

You may also see if a date matches before the start date or after the end date by passing true as the second argument to matches().

let interval = moment('01/01/2014')
  .recur()
  .every(2)
  .days()
interval.matches('12/30/2013') // false
interval.matches('12/30/2013', true) // true

Exceptions

To prevent a date from matching that would normally match, use the except() function.

let recurrence = moment('01/01/2014')
  .recur()
  .every(1)
  .day()
  .except('01/02/2014')
recurrence.matches('01/02/2014') // false

Overriding and Forgetting

If a rule is created with the same measurement of a previous rule, it will override the previous rule. Rules can also be removed from a recurrence.

// Create a recurrence that matches every day, with an exception
let recurrence = moment('01/01/2014')
  .recur()
  .every(1)
  .day()
  .except('01/03/2014')

// This will override the previous rule and match every 2 days instead.
recurrence.every(2).days()

// Exceptions can also be removed by passing a date to the forget() function.
recurrence.forget('01/03/2014')

// Rules can be removed by passing the measurement to the forget() function.
recurrence.forget('days')

Generating Dates

It is also possible to generate dates from the rules. These functions require a starting date.

let recurrence, nextDates

// Create a recurrence
recurrence = moment('01/01/2014')
  .recur()
  .every(2)
  .days()

// Generate the next three dates as moments
// Outputs: [moment("01/03/2014"), moment("01/05/2014"), moment("01/07/2014")]
nextDates = recurrence.next(3)

// Generate the next three dates, formatted in local format
// Outputs: ["01/03/2014", "01/05/2014", "01/07/2014"]
nextDates = recurrence.next(3, 'L')

// Generate previous three dates, formatted in local format
// Outputs: ["12/30/2013", "12/28/2013", "12/26/2013"]
nextDates = recurrence.previous(3, 'L')

If your recurrence does not have a start date set, or if it does but you want to start at a different date, use the fromDate() method first.

let recurrence = moment('01/01/2014')
  .recur()
  .every(2)
  .days()
recurrence.fromDate('02/05/2014')

// Outputs: ["02/06/2014", "02/08/2014", "02/10/2014"]
nextDates = recurrence.next(3, 'L')

With both a start date and an end date set, you can generate all dates within that range that match the pattern (including the start/end dates).

let recurrence = moment()
  .recur('01/01/2014', '01/07/2014')
  .every(2)
  .days()

// Outputs: ["01/01/2014", "01/03/2014", "01/05/2014", "01/07/2014"]
allDates = recurrence.all('L')

Important Note: These functions may be very inefficient/slow. They work by attempting to match every date from the start of a range until the desired number of dates have been generated. So if you attempt to get 10 dates for a rule that matches once a year, it will run the match function for ~3650 days.

Options and Other Methods

moment-recur-ts provides a few methods for getting/setting options, as well as two utility methods. It also creates two additional momentjs functions.

Options

Options can be set when creating a recurrence or using the getter/setter methods listed below.

Set options upon creation. Note that the units for rules are converted to objects, so it is not recommended to set rules this way. They can be set in the options so that they can be imported.

moment().recur({
  start: '01/01/2014',
  end: '12/31/2014',
  rules: [{ units: [2], measure: 'days' }],
  exceptions: ['01/05/2014']
})

Get/Set the Start Date

recurrence.startDate() // Get
recurrence.startDate('01/01/2014') // Set

Get/Set the End Date

recurrence.endDate() // Get
recurrence.endDate('01/01/2014') // Set

Get/Set a temporary "From Date" for use with generating dates

recurrence.fromDate() // Get
recurrence.fromDate('01/01/2014') // Set

Utility Methods

Use repeats() to check if a recurrence has rules set.

recurrence.repeats() // true/false

Use save() to export all options, rules, and exceptions as an object. This can be used to store recurrences in a database. Note: This does not export the "From Date" which is considered a temporary option.

recurrence.save()

momentjs Functions

The monthWeek() method can be used to determine the week of the month a date is in.

moment('01/01/2014').monthWeek() // 0

The dateOnly() method can be used to remove any time information from a moment.

moment('2014-01-01 09:30:26').dateOnly() // 01/01/2014 12:00:00 AM

License

MIT License

See LICENSE file for details.