lib/comparable/comparable.ex

defprotocol Timex.Comparable do
  @moduledoc """
  This protocol is used for comparing and diffing different date/time representations
  """
  alias Timex.Types

  @type granularity ::
          :year
          | :years
          | :month
          | :months
          | :week
          | :weeks
          | :calendar_week
          | :calendar_weeks
          | :day
          | :days
          | :hour
          | :hours
          | :minute
          | :minutes
          | :second
          | :seconds
          | :millisecond
          | :milliseconds
          | :microsecond
          | :microseconds
          | :duration
  @type constants :: :epoch | :zero | :distant_past | :distant_future
  @type comparable ::
          Date.t() | DateTime.t() | NaiveDateTime.t() | Types.date() | Types.datetime()
  @type compare_result :: -1 | 0 | 1 | {:error, term}
  @type diff_result :: Timex.Duration.t() | integer | {:error, term}

  @doc """
  Compare two date or datetime types.

  You can optionally specify a comparison granularity, any of the following:

  - :year
  - :years
  - :month
  - :months
  - :week
  - :weeks
  - :calendar_week (weeks of the calendar as opposed to actual weeks in terms of days)
  - :calendar_weeks
  - :day
  - :days
  - :hour
  - :hours
  - :minute
  - :minutes
  - :second
  - :seconds
  - :millisecond
  - :milliseconds
  - :microsecond (default)
  - :microseconds
  - :duration

  and the dates will be compared with the corresponding accuracy.
  The default granularity is `:microsecond`.

    - 0:  when equal
    - -1: when the first date/time comes before the second
    - 1:  when the first date/time comes after the second
    - {:error, reason}: when there was a problem comparing,
      perhaps due to a value being passed which is not a valid date/datetime

  ## Examples

      iex> use Timex
      iex> date1 = ~D[2014-03-04]
      iex> date2 = ~D[2015-03-04]
      iex> Timex.compare(date1, date2, :year)
      -1
      iex> Timex.compare(date2, date1, :year)
      1
      iex> Timex.compare(date1, date1)
      0
  """
  @spec compare(comparable, comparable, granularity) :: compare_result
  def compare(a, b, granularity \\ :microsecond)

  @doc """
  Get the difference between two date or datetime types.

  You can optionally specify a diff granularity, any of the following:

  - :year
  - :years
  - :month
  - :months
  - :week
  - :weeks
  - :calendar_week (weeks of the calendar as opposed to actual weeks in terms of days)
  - :calendar_weeks
  - :day
  - :days
  - :hour
  - :hours
  - :minute
  - :minutes
  - :second
  - :seconds
  - :millisecond
  - :milliseconds
  - :microsecond (default)
  - :microseconds
  - :duration

  and the result will be an integer value of those units or a Duration struct.
  The diff value will be negative if `a` comes before `b`, and positive if `a` comes
  after `b`. This behaviour mirrors `compare/3`.

  When using granularity of :months, the number of days in the month varies. This
  behavior mirrors `Timex.shift/2`.

  ## Examples

      iex> use Timex
      iex> date1 = ~D[2015-01-28]
      iex> date2 = ~D[2015-02-28]
      iex> Timex.diff(date1, date2, :month)
      -1
      iex> Timex.diff(date2, date1, :month)
      1

      iex> use Timex
      iex> date1 = ~D[2015-01-31]
      iex> date2 = ~D[2015-02-28]
      iex> Timex.diff(date1, date2, :month)
      -1
      iex> Timex.diff(date2, date1, :month)
      0
  """
  @spec diff(comparable, comparable, granularity) :: diff_result
  def diff(a, b, granularity \\ :microsecond)
end