The time
package cannot ordinalize numbers.
So what you should do is use the time
package to only format the month and year parts, and handle the day ordinalization yourself (and concatenate the results).
Ordinalization isn't difficult:
func Ordinalize(x int) string {
if x >= 10 && x < 19 {
return fmt.Sprint(x, "th")
}
switch x % 10 { // the last digit
case 1:
return fmt.Sprint(x, "st")
case 2:
return fmt.Sprint(x, "nd")
case 3:
return fmt.Sprint(x, "rd")
}
return fmt.Sprint(x, "th")
}
Using this helper, your wished format is assembled like this:
s := Ordinalize(t.Day()) + t.Format(" Jan 2006")
Testing it with all possible days:
for day := 1; day <= 31; day++ {
t := time.Date(2020, time.December, day, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC)
s := Ordinalize(t.Day()) + t.Format(" Jan 2006")
fmt.Println(s)
}
Output (try it on the Go Playground):
1st Dec 2020
2nd Dec 2020
3rd Dec 2020
4th Dec 2020
5th Dec 2020
6th Dec 2020
7th Dec 2020
8th Dec 2020
9th Dec 2020
10th Dec 2020
11th Dec 2020
12th Dec 2020
13th Dec 2020
14th Dec 2020
15th Dec 2020
16th Dec 2020
17th Dec 2020
18th Dec 2020
19th Dec 2020
20th Dec 2020
21st Dec 2020
22nd Dec 2020
23rd Dec 2020
24th Dec 2020
25th Dec 2020
26th Dec 2020
27th Dec 2020
28th Dec 2020
29th Dec 2020
30th Dec 2020
31st Dec 2020
30th Dec 2020
, or just want it to work for2020-12-31
? If it's the first one, you can just change your format string to2st Jan 2006
. Thest
is not part of any standard format of go, so it will just show up as-is in the formatted time.