Given two date ranges, what is the simplest or most efficient way to determine whether the two date ranges overlap?
As an example, suppose we have ranges denoted by DateTime variables StartDate1 to EndDate1 and StartDate2 to EndDate2.
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Given two date ranges, what is the simplest or most efficient way to determine whether the two date ranges overlap? As an example, suppose we have ranges denoted by DateTime variables StartDate1 to EndDate1 and StartDate2 to EndDate2.
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Let CondA Mean DateRange A Completely After DateRange B (True if StartA > EndB) Let CondB Mean DateRange A Completely Before DateRange B (True if EndA < StartB) Then Overlap exists if Neither A Nor B is true ( If one range is neither completely after the other, nor completely before the other, then they must overlap) Now deMorgan's law, I think it is, says that
Which means (StartA <= EndB) And (EndA >= StartB) NOTE: This includes conditions where the edges overlap exactly. If you wish to exclude that, change the | |||||||||||
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I believe that it is sufficient to say that the two ranges overlap if:
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For reasoning about temporal relations (or any other interval relations, come to that), consider Allen's Interval Algebra. It describes the 13 possible relations that two intervals can have with respect to each other. You can find other references - "Allen's Interval" seem to be the operative search terms. You can also find information about these operations in Snodgrass's "Developing Time-Oriented Applications in SQL" (PDF available online at URL), and in Date, Darwen and Lorentzos "Temporal Data and the Relational Model" (see Amazon.com, etc). Emtucifor comments:
I think that you cannot count the two entries 'before:before' and 'after:after'. I could see 7 entries if you equate some relations with their inverses (see the diagram in the referenced Wikipedia URL; it has 7 entries, 6 of which have a different inverse, with equals not having a distinct inverse). And whether three is sensible depends on your requirements.
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I woud do
Where IsBetween is something like
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All the solutions that check a multitude of conditions based on where the ranges are in relation to one another can be greatly simplified by just ensuring that a specific range starts earlier! You ensure that the first range starts earlier (or at the same time) by swapping the ranges if necessary up front. Then, you can detect overlap if the other range start is less than or equal to the first range end (if ranges are inclusive, containing both the start and end times) or less than (if ranges are inclusive of start and exclusive of end). Assuming inclusive at both ends, there's only four possibilities of which one is a non-overlap:
The endpoint of the range 2 doesn't enter into it. So, in pseudo-code:
If the ranges are inclusive at the start and exclusive at the end, you just have to replace
You greatly limit the number of checks you have to make because you remove half of the problem space early by ensuring range 1 never starts after range 2. | |||
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Here is a generic method that can be usefull locally.
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The easiest way to do it in my opinion would be to compare if either EndDate1 is before StartDate2 or EndDate2 is before StartDate1. That of course if you are considering intervals in the future and not the past ( StartDate always before EndDate) | |||
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I am afraid I have not found a satisfying algorithm that can solve all conditions. Here is the brute force way, it is limited only by the available list of dates kept in a table. Sadly, will also eats disk I/O like hell.
Here is the function that make use of the above table.
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This article (including pictures) describes the relation of two time periods by the enumeration PeriodRelation:
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