35

I'm writing a REST API in Go, working with dates that don't represent a single point in time.

It's JSON data going to and from the server in "2006-01-02" format, with that data talking to a mysql database using DATE columns.

One thing I've tried is to create a struct that embeds a Time, and implements JSON and SQL conversion interface implementations to be able to correctly interact with the endpoints while still having Time methods available for date math and formatting. e.g.:

package localdate

import (
    "time"
    "encoding/json"
    "database/sql/driver"
)

type LocalDate struct {
    time.Time
}

func NewLocalDate(year int, month time.Month, day int) LocalDate {
    time := time.Date(year, month, day, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC)
    return LocalDate{Time: time}
}

const LocalDateFormat = "2006-01-02" // yyyy-mm-dd

func (ld *LocalDate) UnmarshalJSON(data []byte) error {
    // parse and set the ld.Time variable
}

func (ld *LocalDate) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) {
    return json.Marshal(ld.Format(LocalDateFormat))
}

// sql.Scanner implementation to convert a time.Time column to a LocalDate
func (ld *LocalDate) Scan(value interface{}) error {}

// sql/driver.Valuer implementation to go from LocalDate -> time.Time
func (ld *LocalDate) Value() (driver.Value, error)  {}

// used to convert a LocalDate into something we can plug into a query
// we could just use ld.Time, but that would send '2015-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 UTC'
// instead of '2015-01-01' for the DATE query parameter.  (Which works for mysql, but is officially invalid SQL)
func (ld *LocalDate) SqlDate() string  {
    return ld.Format(LocalDateFormat)
}

And then other structs can be of this type, and get 90% there to representing the date type in my problem domain.

The above code works, but I feel like I'm fighting against the Go current. So a couple questions for the veterans of the language:

Do you think this code will cause more pain than it'll save?
If so, what style would you recommend?

4
  • Could you elaborate on "dates that don't represent a single point in time"? Are they ranges?
    – thwd
    Feb 11, 2015 at 6:55
  • Sorry for the confusion - I used the plural form to mean dates in general...for this scenario I'm dealing with one date at a time.
    – Dan Tanner
    Feb 11, 2015 at 17:37
  • 5
    You could also define your methods on type LocalDate time.Time if you don't need embedding
    – metakeule
    Feb 12, 2015 at 16:28
  • 1
    Check out this recent Go talk: talks.golang.org/2015/json.slide
    – Kiril
    Feb 14, 2015 at 11:19

3 Answers 3

13

I use civil.Date from the package cloud.google.com/go/civil

1
  • 2
    If you're still new to go as I am - the command to import this module is go get cloud.google.com/go/civil Jun 8, 2022 at 15:04
2

I think you can store your data as time.Time but convert it to a string for JSON purposes:

type LocalDate struct {
  t time.Time `json:",string"` // might even work anonymously here
}

To see how to make this work with SQL: https://github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql#timetime-support

1

If the project uses Gorm then we can freely use datatypes.Date from gorm.io/datatypes

import "gorm.io/datatypes"

type UserWithDate struct {
    gorm.Model
    Name string
    Date datatypes.Date
}

user := UserWithDate{Name: "jinzhu", Date: datatypes.Date(time.Now())}
DB.Create(&user)
// INSERT INTO `user_with_dates` (`name`,`date`) VALUES ("jinzhu","2020-07-17 00:00:00")

DB.First(&result, "name = ? AND date = ?", "jinzhu", datatypes.Date(curTime))
// SELECT * FROM user_with_dates WHERE name = "jinzhu" AND date = "2020-07-17 00:00:00" ORDER BY `user_with_dates`.`id` LIMIT 1

Source: github.com/go-gorm/datatypes#date

Under the hood, it's still time.Time, but with zeroed values of the time part.
Example of my usage:

// make the time part of datetime equal to zero
date, err := datatypes.Date(time.Now()).Value()
if err != nil {
    return err
}

dateValue := date.(time.Time)

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