20

I am writing a bash script that needs to print the date of the last working day. So for example if the script is run on a Monday, it will print the date for last Friday.

I found that this prints yesterdays date:

date -d '1 day ago' +'%Y/%m/%d'

I also know that I can get the day of the week by using this statement

date +%w

I want to combine these two statements in order to have a little helper script that prints the required date. The logic goes something like this (note: its Pseudo code - I've never written a bash script)

DAY_OF_WEEK = `date +%w`
if (%DAY_OF_WEEK == 1)
   LOOK_BACK = 3
elif   
   LOOK_BACK = 1
fi

echo `date -d '%LOOK_BACK day ago' +'%Y/%m/%d'`

Can someone help by correcting the pseudo code above?

(I am running on Ubuntu 10.0.4)

2
  • I was trying to, but I can't see any reason for it to be there... in any of your examples. The date command already writes to the standard output. Is there a reason you are using it?
    – Carl Norum
    Mar 21, 2011 at 21:31
  • @Carl: The echo is there merely to display the calculated date - i.e. for debugging purposes. Mar 21, 2011 at 21:47

6 Answers 6

26

You were so close:

day_or_week=`date +%w`
if [ $day_or_week == 1 ] ; then
  look_back=3
else
  look_back=1
fi

date -d "$look_back day ago" +'%Y/%m/%d'
2
  • 1
    By convention, environment variables (PATH, EDITOR, SHELL, ...) and internal shell variables (BASH_VERSION, RANDOM, ...) are fully capitalized. All other variable names should be lowercase. Since variable names are case-sensitive, this convention avoids accidentally overriding environmental and internal variables. Nov 18, 2016 at 19:58
  • 2
    I think there is a typo: $day_or_week should be $day_of_week, right Oct 7, 2019 at 11:34
17

Sunday also needs to be checked.

DAY_OF_WEEK=`date +%w`
if [ $DAY_OF_WEEK = 0 ] ; then
  LOOK_BACK=2
elif [ $DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 ] ; then
  LOOK_BACK=3
else
  LOOK_BACK=1
fi

date -d "$LOOK_BACK day ago" +'%Y/%m/%d'
1
  • 1
    This is an important addition, and should probably be the accepted answer.
    – tripleee
    Feb 13, 2019 at 7:46
3

I'm using a Mac, so my date command doesn't have the same -d flag yours seems to, but the following should work if it behaves as you've indicated:

if [[ $(date +%w) == 1 ]]
then
    LOOK_BACK=3
else
    LOOK_BACK=1
fi

date -d "${LOOK_BACK} day ago" +%Y/%m/%d
2
  • @ahonnecke - it never worked on Mac OS X. What are you getting at?
    – Carl Norum
    May 15, 2014 at 18:33
  • I misunderstood, I thought that your answer was for a mac. May 22, 2014 at 19:29
2

For OSX (tested on 10.9.2 and 10.13.4), so probably any environment where you are using BSD date.

if [ $(date +%w) == 1 ] ; then
    date -v-3d +'%Y/%m/%d'
else
    date -v-1d +'%Y/%m/%d'
fi

You can check to see if you are using BSD date by

$ man date | grep "BSD General"
2

Putting the other answers together, I came up with this:

last_workday() {
    from_date="${@:-today}"
    day_of_week=$(date +%w --date="${from_date}")

    if [ ${day_of_week} = "0" ] ; then
        look_back=2
    elif [ ${day_of_week} = "1" ] ; then
        look_back=3
    else
        look_back=1
    fi

    date -d "${from_date} - ${look_back} day" +'%Y/%m/%d'
}

next_workday() {
    from_date="${@:-today}"
    day_of_week=$(date +%w --date="${from_date}")
    if [ ${day_of_week} = "5" ] ; then
        look_forward=3
    elif [ ${day_of_week} = "6" ] ; then
        look_forward=2
    else
        look_back=1
    fi

    date -d "${from_date} + ${look_forward} day" +'%Y/%m/%d'
}

for i in $(seq 16); do
    now=$(date +'%Y/%m/%d' --date="today + ${i} day")
    prev=$(last_workday "${now}")
    next=$(next_workday "${now}")
    echo "${now}:  ${prev} ${next}"
done
1

A more concise form using a bash inline "ternary" expression:

[[ $(date +%w) == 1 ]] && days=3 || days=1
date -d "$days day ago" +"%Y-%m-%d"

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