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Business

Gem version Build status

Date calculations based on business calendars.

Documentation

To get business, simply:

$ gem install business

Getting started

Get started with business by creating an instance of the calendar class, passing in a hash that specifies with days of the week are considered working days, and which days are holidays.

calendar = Business::Calendar.new(
  working_days: %w( mon tue wed thu fri ),
  holidays: ["01/01/2014", "03/01/2014"]
)

A few calendar configs are bundled with the gem (see lib/business/data for details). Load them by calling the load class method on Calendar. The load_cached variant of this method caches the calendars by name after loading them, to avoid reading and parsing the config file multiple times.

calendar = Business::Calendar.load("weekdays")
calendar = Business::Calendar.load_cached("weekdays")

Checking for business days

To check whether a given date is a business day (falls on one of the specified working days, and is not a holiday), use the business_day? method on Calendar.

calendar.business_day?(Date.parse("Monday, 9 June 2014"))
# => true
calendar.business_day?(Date.parse("Sunday, 8 June 2014"))
# => false

Custom calendars

To use a calendar you've written yourself, you need to add the directory it's stored in as an additional calendar load path:

Business::Calendar.additional_load_paths = ['path/to/your/calendar/directory']

You can then load the calendar as normal.

Business day arithmetic

The add_business_days and subtract_business_days are used to perform business day arithemtic on dates.

date = Date.parse("Thursday, 12 June 2014")
calendar.add_business_days(date, 4).strftime("%A, %d %B %Y")
# => "Wednesday, 18 June 2014"
calendar.subtract_business_days(date, 4).strftime("%A, %d %B %Y")
# => "Friday, 06 June 2014"

The roll_forward and roll_backward methods snap a date to a nearby business day. If provided with a business day, they will return that date. Otherwise, they will advance (forward for roll_forward and backward for roll_backward) until a business day is found.

date = Date.parse("Saturday, 14 June 2014")
calendar.roll_forward(date).strftime("%A, %d %B %Y")
# => "Monday, 16 June 2014"
calendar.roll_backward(date).strftime("%A, %d %B %Y")
# => "Friday, 13 June 2014"

To count the number of business days between two dates, pass the dates to business_days_between. This method counts from start of the first date to start of the second date. So, assuming no holidays, there would be two business days between a Monday and a Wednesday.

date = Date.parse("Saturday, 14 June 2014")
calendar.business_days_between(date, date + 7)
# => 5

But other libraries already do this

Another gem, business_time, also exists for this purpose. We previously used business_time, but encountered several issues that prompted us to start business.

Firstly, business_time works by monkey-patching Date, Time, and FixNum. While this enables syntax like Time.now + 1.business_day, it means that all configuration has to be global. GoCardless handles payments across several geographies, so being able to work with multiple working-day calendars is essential for us. Business provides a simple Calendar class, that is initialized with a configuration that specifies which days of the week are considered to be working days, and which dates are holidays.

Secondly, business_time supports calculations on times as well as dates. For our purposes, date-based calculations are sufficient. Supporting time-based calculations as well makes the code significantly more complex. We chose to avoid this extra complexity by sticking solely to date-based mathematics.

I'm late for business

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