- Fully-qualify function return type hints to avoid requiring imports on use (#241).
- Switches
clojure.spectoclojure.spec.alphato work with latest Clojure 1.9 builds. - Adds
week-yearto go withweek-number-of-year(#239, #240). - Adds function return type hints across the board (#226).
- Add
from-epoch. - Clarify
today-atis UTC. - Add optional
clj-time.specnamespace (requires Clojure 1.9 Alpha 17). - Add
clj-time.typesnamespace with type-based predicates.
- Update Joda Time to 2.9.7 (#223).
- More reflection warnings removed (#221).
- Updated Joda Time (to 2.9.4) and several testing dependencies as well.
floornow retains timezone information (#204).- Reflection warning removed from
with-time-at-start-of-day(#219).
Joda Time has been upgraded to 2.9.3.
java.sql.Date and java.sql.Time are now coerced automatically if you require clj-time.jdbc (previously only java.sql.Timestamp was coerced).
The formatter function now accepts keywords and formatter objects, as well as string formats, so you can easily select a standard format (with a keyword) or provide a specific formatter object.
The library now depends on Clojure 1.8.0 and is tested against 1.6.0, 1.7.0, and 1.9.0-master-SNAPSHOT.
first-day-of-the-month?andlast-day-of-the-month?-- aliases to improve consistency (so it'sthe-montheverywhere).min-dateandmax-date-- to return the minimum or maximum of two or more dates.nth-day-of-the-month-- return the Nth day of the year/month, or date/time.nth-day-of-the-month?-- return true if a given date/time is on the Nth day of its month.with-time-at-start-of-day-- return the time at the start of the day, including timezone and DST support.
today-at-midnight-- deprecated in favor ofwith-time-at-start-of-day.
Issue 185 is fixed by explicitly tying the :rfc822 formatter to the US locale.
The examples in the README are now automatically tested (by midje-readme) so they are more likely to be valid.
Joda Time has been upgraded to 2.8.2.
The library now depends on Clojure 1.7.0.
clj-time.instant is a new namespace that, when loaded, makes it possible
for the Clojure reader to serialize Joda Time data types.
Joda Time has been upgraded to 2.7.
A new predicate equal? has been added, which can be used like before? and
after? to assert two instants represent identical points in time regardless of
differences in time zone.
Contributed by @gws.
A new namespace clj-time.jdbc has been added which extends protocols in
clojure.java.jdbc to allow for easy coercion to and from java.sql.Timestamp
driven by clj-time.coerce.
Contributed by @gws.
clj-time.format/with-default-year is a new function that accepts a formatter
and returns a formatter that uses provided year by default.
Contributed by lummax.
clj-time.core/InTimeUnitProtocol is a new protocol that provides convenient
functions for time unit conversion:
(defprotocol InTimeUnitProtocol
"Interface for in-<time unit> functions"
(in-millis [this] "Return the time in milliseconds.")
(in-seconds [this] "Return the time in seconds.")
(in-minutes [this] "Return the time in minutes.")
(in-hours [this] "Return the time in hours.")
(in-days [this] "Return the time in days.")
(in-weeks [this] "Return the time in weeks")
(in-months [this] "Return the time in months")
(in-years [this] "Return the time in years"))clj-time now officially supports Clojure 1.5.1 and later versions.
Joda Time has been upgraded to 2.6.