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GitHub - Intrepidd/working_hours: ⏰ A modern ruby gem allowing to do time calculation with business / working hours.
⏰ A modern ruby gem allowing to do time calculation with business / working hours. - Intrepidd/working_hours
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GitHub - Intrepidd/working_hours: ⏰ A modern ruby gem allowing to do time calculation with business / working hours.

GitHub - Intrepidd/working_hours: ⏰ A modern ruby gem allowing to do time calculation with business / working hours.

WorkingHours

build

A modern ruby gem allowing to do time calculation with working hours.

Compatible and tested with:

  • Ruby 2.7, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, JRuby 9.4
  • ActiveSupport 5.x, 6.x, 7.x

Installation

Gemfile:

gem 'working_hours'

Usage

require 'working_hours'

# Move forward
1.working.day.from_now
2.working.hours.from_now
15.working.minutes.from_now

# Move backward
1.working.day.ago
2.working.hours.ago
15.working.minutes.ago

# Start from custom Date or Time
Date.new(2014, 12, 31) + 8.working.days # => Mon, 12 Jan 2015
Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 8, 32) - 4.working.hours # => 2014-08-01 13:00:00

# Compute working days between two dates
friday = Date.new(2014, 10, 17)
monday = Date.new(2014, 10, 20)
friday.working_days_until(monday) # => 1
# Time is considered at end of day, so:
# - friday to saturday = 0 working days
# - sunday to monday = 1 working days

# Compute working duration (in seconds) between two times
from = Time.utc(2014, 8, 3, 8, 32) # sunday 8:32am
to = Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 10, 32) # monday 10:32am
from.working_time_until(to) # => 5520 (1.hour + 32.minutes)

# Know if a day is worked
Date.new(2014, 12, 28).working_day? # => false

# Know if a time is worked
Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 7, 16).in_working_hours? # => false

# Advance to next working time
WorkingHours.advance_to_working_time(Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 7, 16)) # => Mon, 04 Aug 2014 09:00:00 UTC +00:00

# Advance to next closing time
WorkingHours.advance_to_closing_time(Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 7, 16)) # => Mon, 04 Aug 2014 17:00:00 UTC +00:00
WorkingHours.advance_to_closing_time(Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 10, 16)) # => Mon, 04 Aug 2014 17:00:00 UTC +00:00
WorkingHours.advance_to_closing_time(Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 18, 16)) # => Tue, 05 Aug 2014 17:00:00 UTC +00:00

# Next working time
sunday = Time.utc(2014, 8, 3)
monday = WorkingHours.next_working_time(sunday) # => Mon, 04 Aug 2014 09:00:00 UTC +00:00
tuesday = WorkingHours.next_working_time(monday) # => Tue, 05 Aug 2014 09:00:00 UTC +00:00

# Return to previous working time
WorkingHours.return_to_working_time(Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 7, 16)) # => Fri, 01 Aug 2014 17:00:00 UTC +00:00

Configuration

The working hours configuration is thread safe and consists of a hash defining working periods for each day, a time zone and a list of days off. You can set it once, for example in a initializer for rails:

# Configure working hours
WorkingHours::Config.working_hours = {
  :tue => {'09:00' => '12:00', '13:00' => '17:00'},
  :wed => {'09:00' => '12:00', '13:00' => '17:00'},
  :thu => {'09:00' => '12:00', '13:00' => '17:00'},
  :fri => {'09:00' => '12:00', '13:00' => '17:05:30'},
  :sat => {'19:00' => '24:00'}
}

# Configure timezone (uses activesupport, defaults to UTC)
WorkingHours::Config.time_zone = 'Paris'

# Configure holidays
WorkingHours::Config.holidays = [Date.new(2014, 12, 31)]

Or you can set it for the duration of a block with the with_config method, this is particularly useful with around_filter:

WorkingHours::Config.with_config(working_hours: {mon:{'09:00' => '18:00'}}, holidays: [], time_zone: 'Paris') do
  # Intense calculations
end

with_config uses keyword arguments, you can pass all or some of the supported arguments :

  • working_hours
  • holidays
  • time_zone

Holiday hours

Sometimes you need to configure different working hours as a one-off, e.g. the working day might end earlier on Christmas Eve.

You can configure this with the holiday_hours option, either as an override on the existing working hours, or as a set of hours that are being worked on a holiday day.

If any hours are set for a calendar day in holiday_hours, then the working_hours for that day will be ignored, and only the entries in holiday_hours taken into consideration.

# Configure holiday hours
WorkingHours::Config.holiday_hours = {Date.new(2020, 12, 24) => {'09:00' => '12:00', '13:00' => '15:00'}}

Handling errors

If the configuration is erroneous, an WorkingHours::InvalidConfiguration exception will be raised containing the appropriate error message.

You can also access the error code in case you want to implement custom behavior or changing one specific message, e.g:

rescue WorkingHours::InvalidConfiguration => e
  if e.error_code == :empty
    raise StandardError.new "Config is required"
  end
  raise e
end

No core extensions / monkey patching

Core extensions (monkey patching to add methods on Time, Date, Numbers, etc.) are handy but not appreciated by everyone. WorkingHours can also be used without any monkey patching:

require 'working_hours/module'

# Move forward
WorkingHours::Duration.new(1, :days).from_now
WorkingHours::Duration.new(2, :hours).from_now
WorkingHours::Duration.new(15, :minutes).from_now

# Move backward
WorkingHours::Duration.new(1, :days).ago
WorkingHours::Duration.new(2, :hours).ago
WorkingHours::Duration.new(15, :minutes).ago

# Start from custom Date or Time
WorkingHours::Duration.new(8, :days).since(Date.new(2014, 12, 31)) # => Mon, 12 Jan 2015
WorkingHours::Duration.new(4, :hours).until(Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 8, 32)) # => 2014-08-01 13:00:00

# Compute working days between two dates
friday = Date.new(2014, 10, 17)
monday = Date.new(2014, 10, 20)
WorkingHours.working_days_between(friday, monday) # => 1
# Time is considered at end of day, so:
# - friday to saturday = 0 working days
# - sunday to monday = 1 working days

# Compute working duration (in seconds) between two times
from = Time.utc(2014, 8, 3, 8, 32) # sunday 8:32am
to = Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 10, 32) # monday 10:32am
WorkingHours.working_time_between(from, to) # => 5520 (1.hour + 32.minutes)

# Know if a day is worked
WorkingHours.working_day?(Date.new(2014, 12, 28)) # => false

# Know if a time is worked
WorkingHours.in_working_hours?(Time.utc(2014, 8, 4, 7, 16)) # => false

Use in your class/module

If you want to use working hours only inside a specific class or module, you can include its computation methods like this:

require 'working_hours/module'

class Order
  include WorkingHours

  def shipping_date_estimate
    Duration.new(2, :days).since(payment_received_at)
  end

  def payment_delay
    working_days_between(created_at, payment_received_at)
  end
end

Timezones

This gem uses a simple but efficient approach in dealing with timezones. When you define your working hours you have to choose a timezone associated with it (in the config example, the working hours are in Paris time). Then, any time used in calculation will be converted to this timezone first, so you don't have to worry if your times are local or UTC as long as they are correct :)

Alternatives

There is a gem called business_time already available to do this kind of computation and it was of great help to us. But we decided to start another one because business_time is suffering from a few bugs and inconsistencies. It also lacks essential features to us (like working minutes computation).

Another gem called biz was released after working_hours to bring some alternative.

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( http://github.com/intrepidd/working_hours/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

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