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@google-cloud/precise-date
Advanced tools
The @google-cloud/precise-date npm package provides a way to handle high-precision dates and times in JavaScript, particularly useful when dealing with databases like Google Cloud Spanner that require precise time specifications down to the nanosecond.
Creating precise dates
This feature allows the creation of date objects that include nanosecond precision. It is particularly useful for applications that need to maintain high accuracy in time stamps, such as logging events in a distributed system or transactions in financial services.
const {PreciseDate} = require('@google-cloud/precise-date');
const preciseDate = new PreciseDate('2019-01-01T12:00:00.000000123Z');
console.log(preciseDate.toISOString());
Comparing precise dates
This feature allows for the comparison of two PreciseDate objects, returning -1, 0, or 1 depending on whether the first date is earlier, the same as, or later than the second date. This is useful for sorting or managing time-based data accurately.
const {PreciseDate} = require('@google-cloud/precise-date');
const date1 = new PreciseDate('2020-05-18T12:00:00.000000123Z');
const date2 = new PreciseDate('2020-05-18T12:00:00.000000124Z');
console.log(date1.compare(date2));
Moment.js is a popular date handling library that provides functions for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates. While it offers broad functionality for handling dates and times, it does not support nanosecond precision like @google-cloud/precise-date.
date-fns is a modular date utility library. Similar to Moment.js, it offers a variety of date manipulation and formatting options but lacks support for nanosecond precision, making @google-cloud/precise-date more suitable for applications requiring extremely precise time measurements.
A simple utility for precise-dateing functions and classes.
It's unlikely you will need to install this package directly, as it will be
installed as a dependency when you install other @google-cloud
packages.
$ npm install --save @google-cloud/precise-date
PreciseDate
extends the native Date
object, so you can use it in place of
that or when you need nanosecond precision.
const {PreciseDate} = require('@google-cloud/precise-date');
const date = new PreciseDate('1547253035381101032');
date.toISOString();
// => 2019-01-12T00:30:35.381101032Z
date.toFullTimeString();
// => '1547253035381101032'
Returns a new date
instance.
Type: string
BigInt
Object<string, number>
[number, number]
// from a full ISO string
date = new PreciseDate('2019-02-08T10:34:29.481145231Z');
// from a string representing nanoseconds
date = new PreciseDate('1549622069481320032');
// from a BigInt representing nanoseconds (requires Node >= 10.7)
date = new PreciseDate(1549622069481320032n);
// from an object containing `seconds` and `nanos` values
date = new PreciseDate({seconds: 1549622069, nanos: 481320032});
// from a tuple representing [seconds, nanos]
date = new PreciseDate([1549622069, 481320032]);
Similar to Date.parse()
, but this accepts the same nanosecond time options as the PreciseDate
constructor and returns a string representing the nanoseconds in the specified date according to universal time.
PreciseDate.parseFull('2019-02-08T10:34:29.481145231Z');
// => '1549622069481145231'
Similar to Date.UTC()
, but also accepts microsecond and nanosecond parameters. Returns a string that represents the number of nanoseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC.
Type: ...number
PreciseDate.fullUTCString(2019, 1, 8, 10, 34, 29, 481, 145, 231);
// => '1549622069481145231'
Like PreciseDate.fullUTCString()
but returns a native BigInt
instead of a string. Requires Node >= 10.7.
Type: ...number
PreciseDate.fullUTC(2019, 1, 8, 10, 34, 29, 481, 145, 231);
// => 1549622069481145231n
PreciseDate
instance.
Returns a string of the specified date represented in nanoseconds according to universal time.
Like date.getFullTimeString()
but returns a native BigInt
instead of a string. Requires Node >= 10.7.
Returns the microseconds in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the nanoseconds in the specified date according to universal time.
Sets the microseconds for a specified date according to universal time. Returns a string representing the nanoseconds in the specified date according to universal time.
Type: number
Sets the nanoseconds for a specified date according to universal time. Returns a string representing the nanoseconds in the specified date according to universal time.
Type: number
Sets the time to the number of supplied nanoseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC. Returns a string representing the nanoseconds in the specified date according to universal time (effectively, the value of the argument).
Type: number
string
BigInt
Returns an object representing the specified date according to universal time.
Refer to google.protobuf.Timestamp
for more information about this format.
const {seconds, nanos} = date.toStruct();
Like date.toStruct()
but returns the seconds
and nanos
as a tuple.
const [seconds, nanos] = date.toTuple();
This library follows Semantic Versioning.
Contributions welcome! See the Contributing Guide.
Apache Version 2.0
See LICENSE
FAQs
A simple utility for precise-dateing functions and classes.
The npm package @google-cloud/precise-date receives a total of 1,422,257 weekly downloads. As such, @google-cloud/precise-date popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @google-cloud/precise-date demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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