How can I convert a Ruby Date to an integer?
6 Answers
t = Time.now
# => 2010-12-20 11:20:31 -0700
# Seconds since epoch
t.to_i
#=> 1292869231
require 'date'
d = Date.today
#=> #<Date: 2010-12-20 (4911101/2,0,2299161)>
epoch = Date.new(1970,1,1)
#=> #<Date: 1970-01-01 (4881175/2,0,2299161)>
d - epoch
#=> (14963/1)
# Days since epoch
(d - epoch).to_i
#=> 14963
# Seconds since epoch
d.to_time.to_i
#=> 1292828400
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I don't see
to_time
in the core doc: corelib.rubyonrails.org/classes/Date.html until Ruby 1.9.2 (ruby-doc.org/stdlib/libdoc/date/rdoc/classes/Date.html). At that point, you can just useto_i
.– JellicleAug 6, 2011 at 17:03 -
2
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@JellicleCat What do you need? Converting Ruby Date to Time? Getting number of days since epoch? Getting number of seconds since epoch?– PhrogzAug 7, 2011 at 6:15
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Seconds since epoch. I know I could do
Time.utc(date.year, date.month, date.day)
. I was hoping for something more elegant looking.– JellicleAug 8, 2011 at 0:17 -
2Your Seconds since epoch example is wrong. See stackoverflow.com/a/4492607/432 instead.– andrewrkJan 13, 2012 at 23:06
Date cannot directly become an integer. Ex:
$ Date.today
=> #<Date: 2017-12-29 ((2458117j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>
$ Date.today.to_i
=> NoMethodError: undefined method 'to_i' for #<Date: 2017-12-29 ((2458117j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>
Your options are either to turn the Date into a time then an Int which will give you the seconds since epoch:
$ Date.today.to_time.to_i
=> 1514523600
Or come up with some other number you want like days since epoch:
$ Date.today.to_time.to_i / (60 * 60 * 24) ### Number of seconds in a day
=> 17529 ### Number of days since epoch
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This is simply not true, Ruby has native support to convert from and to
jd
since 1.9.3– PelleMar 7, 2023 at 8:00
Time.now.to_i
returns seconds since epoch format
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4
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13Be warned that
to_time
will use the system time zone, so you probably want to be explicit:my_date.to_time(:utc).to_i
. Oct 31, 2012 at 19:23 -
One of the reasons why you'd work with Dates is to circumvent this problem. Using
Date#jd
would be a better solution.– PelleMar 7, 2023 at 8:01
Solution for Ruby 1.8 when you have an arbitrary DateTime
object:
1.8.7-p374 :001 > require 'date'
=> true
1.8.7-p374 :002 > DateTime.new(2012, 1, 15).strftime('%s')
=> "1326585600"
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1As long as there are still 1.8 applications that do their job I'm not convinced :)– NowakerNov 3, 2013 at 17:43
I'm incredibly surprised that nobody has given what I believe to be the most correct answer to this.
Since Ruby 1.9.3, Dates can be converted from and to integers. To get the julian day number for any Date, simply use:
> Date.today.jd
=> 2460011
> Date.jd(2460011)
=> Tue, 07 Mar 2023
I had to do it recently and took some time to figure it out but that is how I came across a solution and it may give you some ideas:
require 'date'
today = Date.today
year = today.year
month = today.mon
day = day.mday
year = year.to_s
month = month.to_s
day = day.to_s
if month.length <2
month = "0" + month
end
if day.length <2
day = "0" + day
end
today = year + month + day
today = today.to_i
puts today
At the date of this post, It will put 20191205.
In case the month or day is less than 2 digits it will add a 0 on the left.
I did like this because I had to compare the current date whit some data that came from a DB in this format and as an integer. I hope it helps you.
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This is a great solution, however, the numers it produces wouldn't scale very well. Due to the fact months are 1-12 and days are 1-30. There would be gaps in the ranges.– BrigDec 6, 2019 at 0:16
Date
objects to get the number of days between them. If you actually mean date/timestamps, you can also subtractTime
objects (in which case you get the number of seconds between them, or you can useDateTime
objects (which yield fractional days between instances).