gotosocial/vendor/github.com/ncruces/julianday/julianday.go
kim 1e7b32490d
[experiment] add alternative wasm sqlite3 implementation available via build-tag (#2863)
This allows for building GoToSocial with [SQLite transpiled to WASM](https://github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3) and accessed through [Wazero](https://wazero.io/).
2024-05-27 17:46:15 +02:00

125 lines
3.2 KiB
Go

// Package julianday provides Time to Julian day conversions.
package julianday
import (
"bytes"
"errors"
"math"
"strconv"
"time"
)
const secs_per_day = 86_400
const nsec_per_sec = 1_000_000_000
const nsec_per_day = nsec_per_sec * secs_per_day
const epoch_days = 2_440_587
const epoch_secs = secs_per_day / 2
func jd(t time.Time) (day, nsec int64) {
sec := t.Unix()
// guaranteed not to overflow
day, sec = sec/secs_per_day+epoch_days, sec%secs_per_day+epoch_secs
return day, sec*nsec_per_sec + int64(t.Nanosecond())
}
// Date returns the Julian day number for t,
// and the nanosecond offset within that day,
// in the range [0, 86399999999999].
func Date(t time.Time) (day, nsec int64) {
day, nsec = jd(t)
switch {
case nsec < 0:
day -= 1
nsec += nsec_per_day
case nsec >= nsec_per_day:
day += 1
nsec -= nsec_per_day
}
return day, nsec
}
// Float returns the Julian date for t as a float64.
//
// In the XXI century, this has submillisecond precision.
func Float(t time.Time) float64 {
day, nsec := jd(t)
// converting day and nsec to float64 is exact
return float64(day) + float64(nsec)/nsec_per_day
}
// Format returns the Julian date for t as a string.
//
// This has nanosecond precision.
func Format(t time.Time) string {
var buf [32]byte
return string(AppendFormat(buf[:0], t))
}
// AppendFormat is like Format but appends the textual representation to dst
// and returns the extended buffer.
func AppendFormat(dst []byte, t time.Time) []byte {
day, nsec := Date(t)
if day < 0 && nsec != 0 {
dst = append(dst, '-')
day = ^day
nsec = nsec_per_day - nsec
}
var buf [20]byte
dst = strconv.AppendInt(dst, day, 10)
frac := strconv.AppendFloat(buf[:0], float64(nsec)/nsec_per_day, 'f', 15, 64)
return append(dst, bytes.TrimRight(frac[1:], ".0")...)
}
// Time returns the UTC Time corresponding to the Julian day number
// and nanosecond offset within that day.
// Not all day values have a corresponding time value.
func Time(day, nsec int64) time.Time {
return time.Unix((day-epoch_days)*secs_per_day-epoch_secs, nsec).UTC()
}
// FloatTime returns the UTC Time corresponding to a Julian date.
// Not all date values have a corresponding time value.
//
// In the XXI century, this has submillisecond precision.
func FloatTime(date float64) time.Time {
day, frac := math.Modf(date)
nsec := math.Floor(frac * nsec_per_day)
return Time(int64(day), int64(nsec))
}
// Parse parses a formatted Julian date and returns the UTC Time it represents.
//
// This has nanosecond precision.
func Parse(s string) (time.Time, error) {
digits := 0
dot := len(s)
for i, b := range []byte(s) {
if '0' <= b && b <= '9' {
digits++
continue
}
if b == '.' && i < dot {
dot = i
continue
}
if (b == '+' || b == '-') && i == 0 {
continue
}
return time.Time{}, errors.New("julianday: invalid syntax")
}
if digits == 0 {
return time.Time{}, errors.New("julianday: invalid syntax")
}
day, err := strconv.ParseInt(s[:dot], 10, 64)
if err != nil && dot > 0 {
return time.Time{}, errors.New("julianday: value out of range")
}
frac, _ := strconv.ParseFloat(s[dot:], 64)
nsec := int64(math.Round(frac * nsec_per_day))
if s[0] == '-' {
nsec = -nsec
}
return Time(day, nsec), nil
}