This library is used to work with dates in multiple calendrical system (i.e. Ethiopic, Nepali etc..) across DHIS-2 applications. It mainly exposes two components:
- Hooks like useDatePicker used to build UI components (part of @dhis/ui) such as the Calendar and CalendarInput components.
- Helper methods, like
generateFixedPeriods
andgetNowInCalendar
to deal with period generations, date manipulation and arithmetic across multiple calendrical systems.
The idea behind this library is to abstract the complicated details of dealing with dates in DHIS2, and to centralise them in one place for consumption in different apps and libraries.
Internally, the library relies on the Temporal API which aims to achieve, among other goals, full-support for non-Gregorian calendars.
This document has some of the requirements and design decisions for this project.
This Jira epic lists the app that moved to using the library, and what comes next.
The library also provides helper methods to work with periods and dates in multiple calendars. This allows doing date arithmetic, comparisons in a standard timezone-safe way. It currently relies on the Temporal API.
The library is built on top of Temporal API, but this is an implementation detail, and one of the goals of the library is to hide that detail to allow replacing Temporal with a different implementation in the future, i.e. a Kotlin multi-platform implementation to achieve consistency between web, android and backend.
generateFixedPeriods
returns the periods of a specific type in a specific
year. This is used, for example in Data
Visualizer, to display
the list of periods of different types (i.e. monthly, weekly, yearly) in a
specific year, according to the user's calendar and locale.
Calling generateFixedPeriods({year: 2015, periodType: "FYNOV", calendar: "gregory"})
will return all the November financial year periods (FYNOV) from
the year 2015 (defaults to 10 years). Here are some more examples:
// some examples
import { generateFixedPeriods } from '@dhis2/multi-calendar-dates'
describe('generateFixedPeriods', () => {
it('should generate financial years periods (starting November) for the specified', () => {
const result = generateFixedPeriods({
year: 2015,
calendar: 'gregory',
locale: 'en',
periodType: 'FYNOV',
})
expect(result).toEqual(
expect.arrayContaining([
{
id: '2015Nov',
name: 'November 2015 - October 2016',
startDate: '2015-11-01',
endDate: '2016-10-31',
},
{
id: '2014Nov',
name: 'November 2014 - October 2015',
startDate: '2014-11-01',
endDate: '2015-10-31',
},
// .... up to
{
id: '2006Nov',
name: 'November 2006 - October 2007',
startDate: '2006-11-01',
endDate: '2007-10-31',
},
])
)
})
it('should generate weekly periods (weeks starting on Sunday) for the specified year', () => {
const result = generateFixedPeriods({
year: 2015,
calendar: 'gregory',
locale: 'en',
periodType: 'WEEKLYSUN',
})
expect(result).toEqual(
expect.arrayContaining([
{
id: '2015SunW1',
iso: '2015SunW1',
name: 'Week 1 - 2015-01-04 - 2015-01-10',
startDate: '2015-01-04',
endDate: '2015-01-10',
},
// .... up to
{
id: '2015SunW52',
iso: '2015SunW52',
name: 'Week 52 - 2015-12-27 - 2016-01-02',
startDate: '2015-12-27',
endDate: '2016-01-02',
},
])
)
})
it('should generate monthly periods (localised in Spanish) for the specified year', () => {
const result = generateFixedPeriods({
year: 2015,
calendar: 'gregory',
locale: 'es',
periodType: 'MONTHLY',
})
expect(result).toEqual(
expect.arrayContaining([
{
id: '201501',
iso: '201501',
name: 'Enero de 2015',
startDate: '2015-01-01',
endDate: '2015-01-31',
},
// .... up to
{
id: '201512',
iso: '201512',
name: 'Diciembre de 2015',
startDate: '2015-12-01',
endDate: '2015-12-31',
},
])
)
})
it('should generate bi-monthly periods for the Ethiopic calendar for the specified year', () => {
const result = generateFixedPeriods({
year: 2015,
calendar: 'ethiopic',
locale: 'en',
periodType: 'BIMONTHLY',
})
expect(result).toEqual(
expect.arrayContaining([
{
id: '201501B',
iso: '201501B',
name: 'Meskerem - Tekemt 2015',
startDate: '2015-01-01',
endDate: '2015-02-30',
},
// .... up to
{
endDate: '2015-12-30',
id: '201506B',
iso: '201506B',
name: 'Hamle - Nehasse 2015',
startDate: '2015-11-01',
},
])
)
})
it('should generate six-monthly periods for the Nepali calendar for the specified year', () => {
const result = generateFixedPeriods({
year: 2078,
calendar: 'nepali',
locale: 'en',
periodType: 'SIXMONTHLY',
})
expect(result).toEqual([
{
id: '2078S1',
iso: '2078S1',
name: 'Baisakh - Ashwin 2078',
startDate: '2078-01-01',
endDate: '2078-06-31',
},
{
id: '2078S2',
iso: '2078S2',
name: 'Kartik - Chaitra 2078',
startDate: '2078-07-01',
endDate: '2078-12-30',
},
])
})
})
The method takes a single options
parameter and returns an
Array<FixedPeriod>
.
The options
param is an object of type GeneratedPeriodParams
:
type GeneratedPeriodParams = {
year: number
periodType: PeriodIdentifier
calendar: SupportedCalendar
locale?: string
startingDay?: number /** 1 is Monday */
yearsCount?: number
}
For convenience, locale
can be passed in the Java-like style (i.e. ar_SD
rather than ar-SD
) and it will be converted to the JS-style. yearsCount
is
used when generating yearly periods to know how many years to generate
(defaults to 10). `
periodType
can be one of the period identifiers defined
here.
Although the library internally is flexible and can accept, for example,
quarterly periods starting any month (i.e. QUARTERLYMAY
), support for such
periods might not be available in the backend, so they should be used
carefully. The flexibility, though, means that a new period could be added to
the backend and used without changes in the frontend.
The returned value is an array of FixedPeriod
s:
type FixedPeriod = {
id: string
iso?: string
name: string
startDate: string
endDate: string
}
id
(andiso
) are the same right now, and return a period identifier, i.e.2015Q1
(quarter one of the year 2015) or2015SunW1
(the first week- starting Sunday - of the year 2015). The full list of values are documented in periodValues in the feature files.
please use
id
to identify the period.iso
was added for backwards compatibility with existing implementations
startDate
andendDate
are the start and end dates of the specific period. This is provided for convenience, but the backend currently only makes use of the ID to work out what each period means.name
is the human readable name of the period, according to what we dispaly in DHIS2 Data Visualizer, i.e.Week 1 - 2014-13-03 - 2015-01-04
for a weekly period or2015
for a yearly period.
getNowInCalendar
returns today's date in the specified calendrical system.
// Assuming today's date is 13th October 2021
beforeEach(() => {
// 13 October 2021 UTC
jest.spyOn(Date, 'now').mockReturnValue(1634089600000)
})
it('should get today date in Gregorian', () => {
const { day, month, year } = getNowInCalendar('gregory', 'UTC')
expect({ day, month, year }).toEqual({ day: 13, month: 10, year: 2021 })
})
it('should get today date in Ethiopic', () => {
const { day, month, eraYear: year } = getNowInCalendar('ethiopic', 'UTC')
expect({ day, month, year }).toEqual({
day: 3,
month: 2,
year: 2014,
})
})
convertFromIso8601
and convertToIso8601
are used to convert between Iso8601 (gregorian) dates and specific calendars (i.e. Ethiopic or Nepali). It accepts either a string in the format yyyy-MM-dd
or an object representing the date properties (year
, month
and day
).
it('should convert a gregorian date to ethiopic', () => {
const result = convertFromIso8601('2024-05-23', 'ethiopic')
expect(result).toMatchObject({
year: 7516,
eraYear: 2016,
month: 9,
day: 15,
})
})
it('should convert a Nepali date to gregorian', () => {
const result = convertToIso8601('2081-02-10', 'nepali')
expect(result).toMatchObject({ year: 2024, month: 5, day: 23 })
})
it('should convert an ethiopic date to gregorian', () => {
const result = convertToIso8601('2016-09-15', 'ethiopic')
expect(result).toMatchObject({ year: 2024, month: 5, day: 23 })
})
it('should accept a date object instead of a string', () => {
const result = convertToIso8601(
{
year: 2081,
month: 2,
day: 10,
},
'nepali'
)
expect(result).toMatchObject({ year: 2024, month: 5, day: 23 })
})
The method takes two positional arguments:
calendarToUse
which can be one of the calendars specified here (defaults togregory
calendar if not specied.timeZone
: a string representing the time zone (defaults toUTC
) of the user.
and returns a
ZonedDateTime
object, which can be destructured to .year
or .eraYear
(eraYear
preferred
to avoid an issue with Ethiopic calendar), .month
, .day
which returns the
values in the specified calendar, or you can .getISOFields()
to return the
underlying iso8601 (gregory) date.
ToDo: we should also return the date stringified into
yyyy-MM-dd
since this is the most common usecase and it would help clients not to have to do the conversion manually.
The function expects an options object with the following properties:
Option | type | Required | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
periodId |
string |
yes | - | A period id, e.g. 2020 or 2020April |
calendar |
SupportedCalendar |
yes | - | A calendar sytem, e.g. gregory or ethiopic |
locale |
string |
no | "en" |
A language locale for the displayed labels |
Returns a FixedPeriod
whos id
equals the provided periodId
, see src/period-calculation/types.ts
createFixedPeriodFromPeriodId({
periodId: '2023',
calendar: 'gregory',
})
will return:
{
periodType: 'YEARLY',
name: '2023',
displayName: '2023',
id: '2023',
iso: '2023',
startDate: '2023-01-01',
endDate: '2023-12-31',
}
The function expects an options object with the following properties:
Option | Type | Required | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
period |
FixedPeriod |
yes | - | A period id, e.g. 2020 or 2020April |
calendar |
SupportedCalendar |
yes | - | A calendar sytem, e.g. gregory or ethiopic |
steps |
integer |
no | 1 |
Amount of adjacent fixed period forward/backward, can be negative |
locale |
string |
no | "en" |
A language locale for the displayed labels |
Returns a collection with fixed periods, see src/period-calculation/types.ts
With steps: 1
(default):
const period = createFixedPeriodFromPeriodId({
periodId: '20230101',
calendar: 'gregory',
})
getAdjacentFixedPeriods({
period,
calendar: 'gregory',
})
will return:
{
periodType: 'YEARLY',
name: '2023',
displayName: '2023',
id: '2023',
iso: '2023',
startDate: '2023-01-01',
endDate: '2023-12-31',
}
With steps: 2
:
const period = createFixedPeriodFromPeriodId({
periodId: '20221230',
calendar: 'gregory',
})
getAdjacentFixedPeriods({
period,
calendar: 'gregory',
steps: 2,
})
will return:
;[
{
periodType: 'DAILY',
name: '2022-12-31',
displayName: 'December 31, 2022',
id: '20221231',
iso: '20221231',
startDate: '2022-12-31',
endDate: '2022-12-31',
},
{
periodType: 'DAILY',
name: '2023-01-01',
displayName: 'January 1, 2023',
id: '20230101',
iso: '20230101',
startDate: '2023-01-01',
endDate: '2023-01-01',
},
]
With steps: -3
:
const period = createFixedPeriodFromPeriodId({
periodId: '20230102',
calendar: 'gregory',
})
getAdjacentFixedPeriods({
period,
calendar: 'gregory',
steps: -3,
})
will return:
;[
{
periodType: 'DAILY',
name: '2022-12-30',
displayName: 'December 30, 2022',
id: '20221230',
iso: '20221230',
startDate: '2022-12-30',
endDate: '2022-12-30',
},
{
periodType: 'DAILY',
name: '2022-12-31',
displayName: 'December 31, 2022',
id: '20221231',
iso: '20221231',
startDate: '2022-12-31',
endDate: '2022-12-31',
},
{
periodType: 'DAILY',
name: '2023-01-01',
displayName: 'January 1, 2023',
id: '20230101',
iso: '20230101',
startDate: '2023-01-01',
endDate: '2023-01-01',
},
]
The function expects an options object with the following properties:
Option | Type | Required | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
periodType |
PeriodType |
yes | - | E.g. 'YEARLY' (see |
src/period-calculation/period-types.ts ) |
||||
calendar |
SupportedCalendar |
yes | - | A calendar sytem, e.g. gregory or ethiopic |
date |
string |
yes | - | E.g. '2020-10-04' |
locale |
string |
no | "en" |
A language locale for the displayed labels |
Returns a fixed period, see src/period-calculation/types.ts
getFixedPeriodByDate({
periodType: 'DAILY',
date: '2022-01-01',
calendar: 'gregory',
})
will return:
{
periodType: 'DAILY',
id: '20220101',
iso: '20220101',
displayName: 'January 1, 2022',
name: '2022-01-01',
startDate: '2022-01-01',
endDate: '2022-01-01'
}
Some functions require a period type to be passed. Instead of hardcoding string
or manually replicating the constants used in the library, they're being
exposed. periodTypes
is an array with string, which can easily be converted
to an object:
const obj = periodTypes.reduce(
(acc, periodType) => ({ ...acc, [periodType]: periodType }),
{}
)
For all available period types, see: src/period-calculation/period-types.ts
type periodTypes = string[]
There are some special DHIS2-specific cases when doing period calculations that we handle. The specs for these are documented in the tests and cucumber feature files. Some of these are:
- Dealing with the 13th month in the Ethiopian calendar: the Ethiopic calendar has 13 months: 12 months of 30 days, then the 13th month has 5 or 6 days depending on whether it's a leap year or not. When generating periods for bi-weekly or less (bi-weekly, weekly, daily) then the 13th month is displayed. But when we are generating periods for monthly or larger, we do not display the 13th month. The backend then makes the decision about where to include any data for the 13th month, so when doing monthly analytics, the 13th month will be lumped with the following month's data.
- The period IDs are dictated by the backend, and they use the Gregorian
month names, for example,
QuarterlyNov
orQuarterlyApr
. In the frontend, in a non-Gregorian calendar,Nov
will be "translated" into the 11th month of the current calendar system (Hamle in Ethiopic). Ideally, we will have period IDs that are calendar-agnostic in the future, but this works for now as a solution. - From the frontend perspective, we always send a date in the calendar
system. It is formatted in an ISO-like format (
yyyy-MM-dd
). It is "ISO-like", because the date is actually in the calendar system rather than the Gregorian ISO8601 calendar. So when a system set to Ethiopic, sends2015-01-01
to the backend, it means the year 2015 in Ethiopic (which is 2022 in Gregorian). This is what the backend expects, and if there is a need for a conversion, then it happens in the backend.- Given we have the Temporal object in the frontend, we have the ability to send the date converted into Gregorian, but that's what the backend expects right now.
- Nepali is implemented as a custom calendar: see
nepaliCalendar.ts.
Nepali is luni-solar calendar which means that the length of months can
vary from year to year. The way Temporal does date arithmetic, is that it
converts the day to gregorian, performs the arithmetic, then converts it
back to the calendar. This leads to weird situations where you do
nepaliDate.add({month: 1})
for example, but the result is still in the current month (since the month has 30 days in Gregorian, but 32 in Nepali for example). To get around that, we set the day to the 14th before doing arithmetic (in the context of period generation) and this leads to results that make sense in the context of DHIS2. - Nepali is also not supported as a locale in major browsers. So we rely on
localising it with a hardcoded map, meaning we don't have the same
flexibility showing the day or month names as short or long for example
with
.toLocaleString
. That means that the consumer can only use one ofne-NP
oren-NP
(nepali months and days transliterated into English) as a locale with the Nepali calendar, and they can't use browser localisations (so they can't display Nepali month names in French for example, but they would be able to do so with Ehtiopic or Islamic calendars). - In Ethiopic calendar, when consuming a date, use
.eraYear
rather than.year
to get the year part of a date. There is an ongoing discussion on Temporal to decide which era of the Ethiopic calendar should be the default, but it's likely to be browser-dependent at the end, so it's safer to useeraYear
as this is what users in Ethiopia would expect to see. We looked at abstracting this difference away in the library, but there was no easy solution for it. - The library also abstracts some DHIS2-specific inconsistencies with the
backend to make it easier for consumers of the library. For example, it has
a map to convert from the calendar IDs used in DHIS2 to the ones expected
by the library:
dhis2CalendarsMap.ts.
This maps "ethiopian" (used in DHIS2) to "ethiopic" which is the standard
ID used in JavaScript (in Unicode CLDR). It
also maps the Java locale names with an underscore to ones with a dash, to
make them easier to use in a JavaScript context (i.e from
ar_SD
toar-SD
).
The library provides a hook useDatePicker
that's consumed by the dhis/ui
calendar components. There are two components that currently use it:
- Calendar: a calendar component supporting non-Greogorian calendars
- CalendarInput: a wrapper around the Calendar component to support the most common use case for a calendar when we want to display it next to an input.
useDatePicker
takes a
DatePickerOptions
object, and returns
UseDatePickerReturn
that contains information needed to render a UI component, i.e. the localised
day names, and the weeks in the current view (month).
// the options passed to useDatePicker
type DatePickerOptions = {
date: string
options: PickerOptions
onDateSelect: ({
calendarDate,
calendarDateString,
}: {
calendarDate: Temporal.ZonedDateTime
calendarDateString: string
}) => void
}
// the return type of the hook
type UseDatePickerReturn = UseNavigationReturnType & {
weekDayLabels: string[]
calendarWeekDays: {
zdt: Temporal.ZonedDateTime
label: string | number
calendarDate: string
onClick: () => void
isSelected: boolean | undefined
isToday: boolean
isInCurrentMonth: boolean
}[][]
}