|  | /*
  ==============================================================================
   This file is part of the JUCE library - "Jules' Utility Class Extensions"
   Copyright 2004-11 by Raw Material Software Ltd.
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   JUCE can be redistributed and/or modified under the terms of the GNU General
   Public License (Version 2), as published by the Free Software Foundation.
   A copy of the license is included in the JUCE distribution, or can be found
   online at www.gnu.org/licenses.
   JUCE is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
   WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
   A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License for more details.
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   To release a closed-source product which uses JUCE, commercial licenses are
   available: visit www.rawmaterialsoftware.com/juce for more information.
  ==============================================================================
*/
#ifndef __JUCE_TIME_JUCEHEADER__
#define __JUCE_TIME_JUCEHEADER__
#include "juce_RelativeTime.h"
//==============================================================================
/**
    Holds an absolute date and time.
    Internally, the time is stored at millisecond precision.
    @see RelativeTime
*/
class JUCE_API  Time
{
public:
    //==============================================================================
    /** Creates a Time object.
        This default constructor creates a time of 1st January 1970, (which is
        represented internally as 0ms).
        To create a time object representing the current time, use getCurrentTime().
        @see getCurrentTime
    */
    Time() noexcept;
    /** Creates a time based on a number of milliseconds.
        The internal millisecond count is set to 0 (1st January 1970). To create a
        time object set to the current time, use getCurrentTime().
        @param millisecondsSinceEpoch   the number of milliseconds since the unix
                                        'epoch' (midnight Jan 1st 1970).
        @see getCurrentTime, currentTimeMillis
    */
    explicit Time (int64 millisecondsSinceEpoch) noexcept;
    /** Creates a time from a set of date components.
        The timezone is assumed to be whatever the system is using as its locale.
        @param year             the year, in 4-digit format, e.g. 2004
        @param month            the month, in the range 0 to 11
        @param day              the day of the month, in the range 1 to 31
        @param hours            hours in 24-hour clock format, 0 to 23
        @param minutes          minutes 0 to 59
        @param seconds          seconds 0 to 59
        @param milliseconds     milliseconds 0 to 999
        @param useLocalTime     if true, encode using the current machine's local time; if
                                false, it will always work in GMT.
    */
    Time (int year,
          int month,
          int day,
          int hours,
          int minutes,
          int seconds = 0,
          int milliseconds = 0,
          bool useLocalTime = true) noexcept;
    /** Creates a copy of another Time object. */
    Time (const Time& other) noexcept;
    /** Destructor. */
    ~Time() noexcept;
    /** Copies this time from another one. */
    Time& operator= (const Time& other) noexcept;
    //==============================================================================
    /** Returns a Time object that is set to the current system time.
        @see currentTimeMillis
    */
    static Time JUCE_CALLTYPE getCurrentTime() noexcept;
    /** Returns the time as a number of milliseconds.
        @returns    the number of milliseconds this Time object represents, since
                    midnight jan 1st 1970.
        @see getMilliseconds
    */
    int64 toMilliseconds() const noexcept                           { return millisSinceEpoch; }
    /** Returns the year.
        A 4-digit format is used, e.g. 2004.
    */
    int getYear() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the number of the month.
        The value returned is in the range 0 to 11.
        @see getMonthName
    */
    int getMonth() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the name of the month.
        @param threeLetterVersion   if true, it'll be a 3-letter abbreviation, e.g. "Jan"; if false
                                    it'll return the long form, e.g. "January"
        @see getMonth
    */
    String getMonthName (bool threeLetterVersion) const;
    /** Returns the day of the month.
        The value returned is in the range 1 to 31.
    */
    int getDayOfMonth() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the number of the day of the week.
        The value returned is in the range 0 to 6 (0 = sunday, 1 = monday, etc).
    */
    int getDayOfWeek() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the name of the weekday.
        @param threeLetterVersion   if true, it'll return a 3-letter abbreviation, e.g. "Tue"; if
                                    false, it'll return the full version, e.g. "Tuesday".
    */
    String getWeekdayName (bool threeLetterVersion) const;
    /** Returns the number of hours since midnight.
        This is in 24-hour clock format, in the range 0 to 23.
        @see getHoursInAmPmFormat, isAfternoon
    */
    int getHours() const noexcept;
    /** Returns true if the time is in the afternoon.
        So it returns true for "PM", false for "AM".
        @see getHoursInAmPmFormat, getHours
    */
    bool isAfternoon() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the hours in 12-hour clock format.
        This will return a value 1 to 12 - use isAfternoon() to find out
        whether this is in the afternoon or morning.
        @see getHours, isAfternoon
    */
    int getHoursInAmPmFormat() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the number of minutes, 0 to 59. */
    int getMinutes() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the number of seconds, 0 to 59. */
    int getSeconds() const noexcept;
    /** Returns the number of milliseconds, 0 to 999.
        Unlike toMilliseconds(), this just returns the position within the
        current second rather than the total number since the epoch.
        @see toMilliseconds
    */
    int getMilliseconds() const noexcept;
    /** Returns true if the local timezone uses a daylight saving correction. */
    bool isDaylightSavingTime() const noexcept;
    /** Returns a 3-character string to indicate the local timezone. */
    String getTimeZone() const noexcept;
    //==============================================================================
    /** Quick way of getting a string version of a date and time.
        For a more powerful way of formatting the date and time, see the formatted() method.
        @param includeDate      whether to include the date in the string
        @param includeTime      whether to include the time in the string
        @param includeSeconds   if the time is being included, this provides an option not to include
                                the seconds in it
        @param use24HourClock   if the time is being included, sets whether to use am/pm or 24
                                hour notation.
        @see formatted
    */
    String toString (bool includeDate,
                     bool includeTime,
                     bool includeSeconds = true,
                     bool use24HourClock = false) const noexcept;
    /** Converts this date/time to a string with a user-defined format.
        This uses the C strftime() function to format this time as a string. To save you
        looking it up, these are the escape codes that strftime uses (other codes might
        work on some platforms and not others, but these are the common ones):
        %a  is replaced by the locale's abbreviated weekday name.
        %A  is replaced by the locale's full weekday name.
        %b  is replaced by the locale's abbreviated month name.
        %B  is replaced by the locale's full month name.
        %c  is replaced by the locale's appropriate date and time representation.
        %d  is replaced by the day of the month as a decimal number [01,31].
        %H  is replaced by the hour (24-hour clock) as a decimal number [00,23].
        %I  is replaced by the hour (12-hour clock) as a decimal number [01,12].
        %j  is replaced by the day of the year as a decimal number [001,366].
        %m  is replaced by the month as a decimal number [01,12].
        %M  is replaced by the minute as a decimal number [00,59].
        %p  is replaced by the locale's equivalent of either a.m. or p.m.
        %S  is replaced by the second as a decimal number [00,61].
        %U  is replaced by the week number of the year (Sunday as the first day of the week) as a decimal number [00,53].
        %w  is replaced by the weekday as a decimal number [0,6], with 0 representing Sunday.
        %W  is replaced by the week number of the year (Monday as the first day of the week) as a decimal number [00,53]. All days in a new year preceding the first Monday are considered to be in week 0.
        %x  is replaced by the locale's appropriate date representation.
        %X  is replaced by the locale's appropriate time representation.
        %y  is replaced by the year without century as a decimal number [00,99].
        %Y  is replaced by the year with century as a decimal number.
        %Z  is replaced by the timezone name or abbreviation, or by no bytes if no timezone information exists.
        %%  is replaced by %.
        @see toString
    */
    String formatted (const String& format) const;
    //==============================================================================
    /** Adds a RelativeTime to this time. */
    Time& operator+= (const RelativeTime& delta);
    /** Subtracts a RelativeTime from this time. */
    Time& operator-= (const RelativeTime& delta);
    //==============================================================================
    /** Tries to set the computer's clock.
        @returns    true if this succeeds, although depending on the system, the
                    application might not have sufficient privileges to do this.
    */
    bool setSystemTimeToThisTime() const;
    //==============================================================================
    /** Returns the name of a day of the week.
        @param dayNumber            the day, 0 to 6 (0 = sunday, 1 = monday, etc)
        @param threeLetterVersion   if true, it'll return a 3-letter abbreviation, e.g. "Tue"; if
                                    false, it'll return the full version, e.g. "Tuesday".
    */
    static String getWeekdayName (int dayNumber,
                                  bool threeLetterVersion);
    /** Returns the name of one of the months.
        @param monthNumber  the month, 0 to 11
        @param threeLetterVersion   if true, it'll be a 3-letter abbreviation, e.g. "Jan"; if false
                                    it'll return the long form, e.g. "January"
    */
    static String getMonthName (int monthNumber,
                                bool threeLetterVersion);
    //==============================================================================
    // Static methods for getting system timers directly..
    /** Returns the current system time.
        Returns the number of milliseconds since midnight jan 1st 1970.
        Should be accurate to within a few millisecs, depending on platform,
        hardware, etc.
    */
    static int64 currentTimeMillis() noexcept;
    /** Returns the number of millisecs since a fixed event (usually system startup).
        This returns a monotonically increasing value which it unaffected by changes to the
        system clock. It should be accurate to within a few millisecs, depending on platform,
        hardware, etc.
        Being a 32-bit return value, it will of course wrap back to 0 after 2^32 seconds of
        uptime, so be careful to take that into account. If you need a 64-bit time, you can
        use currentTimeMillis() instead.
        @see getApproximateMillisecondCounter
    */
    static uint32 getMillisecondCounter() noexcept;
    /** Returns the number of millisecs since a fixed event (usually system startup).
        This has the same function as getMillisecondCounter(), but returns a more accurate
        value, using a higher-resolution timer if one is available.
        @see getMillisecondCounter
    */
    static double getMillisecondCounterHiRes() noexcept;
    /** Waits until the getMillisecondCounter() reaches a given value.
        This will make the thread sleep as efficiently as it can while it's waiting.
    */
    static void waitForMillisecondCounter (uint32 targetTime) noexcept;
    /** Less-accurate but faster version of getMillisecondCounter().
        This will return the last value that getMillisecondCounter() returned, so doesn't
        need to make a system call, but is less accurate - it shouldn't be more than
        100ms away from the correct time, though, so is still accurate enough for a
        lot of purposes.
        @see getMillisecondCounter
    */
    static uint32 getApproximateMillisecondCounter() noexcept;
    //==============================================================================
    // High-resolution timers..
    /** Returns the current high-resolution counter's tick-count.
        This is a similar idea to getMillisecondCounter(), but with a higher
        resolution.
        @see getHighResolutionTicksPerSecond, highResolutionTicksToSeconds,
             secondsToHighResolutionTicks
    */
    static int64 getHighResolutionTicks() noexcept;
    /** Returns the resolution of the high-resolution counter in ticks per second.
        @see getHighResolutionTicks, highResolutionTicksToSeconds,
             secondsToHighResolutionTicks
    */
    static int64 getHighResolutionTicksPerSecond() noexcept;
    /** Converts a number of high-resolution ticks into seconds.
        @see getHighResolutionTicks, getHighResolutionTicksPerSecond,
             secondsToHighResolutionTicks
    */
    static double highResolutionTicksToSeconds (int64 ticks) noexcept;
    /** Converts a number seconds into high-resolution ticks.
        @see getHighResolutionTicks, getHighResolutionTicksPerSecond,
             highResolutionTicksToSeconds
    */
    static int64 secondsToHighResolutionTicks (double seconds) noexcept;
private:
    //==============================================================================
    int64 millisSinceEpoch;
};
//==============================================================================
/** Adds a RelativeTime to a Time. */
JUCE_API Time operator+ (const Time& time, const RelativeTime& delta);
/** Adds a RelativeTime to a Time. */
JUCE_API Time operator+ (const RelativeTime& delta, const Time& time);
/** Subtracts a RelativeTime from a Time. */
JUCE_API Time operator- (const Time& time, const RelativeTime& delta);
/** Returns the relative time difference between two times. */
JUCE_API const RelativeTime operator- (const Time& time1, const Time& time2);
/** Compares two Time objects. */
JUCE_API bool operator== (const Time& time1, const Time& time2);
/** Compares two Time objects. */
JUCE_API bool operator!= (const Time& time1, const Time& time2);
/** Compares two Time objects. */
JUCE_API bool operator<  (const Time& time1, const Time& time2);
/** Compares two Time objects. */
JUCE_API bool operator<= (const Time& time1, const Time& time2);
/** Compares two Time objects. */
JUCE_API bool operator>  (const Time& time1, const Time& time2);
/** Compares two Time objects. */
JUCE_API bool operator>= (const Time& time1, const Time& time2);
#endif   // __JUCE_TIME_JUCEHEADER__
 |