PrimeCalendar
provides all the java.util.Calendar
functionalities for Persian
, Hijri
, and Japanese
dates.
PrimeCalendar
can be used in every JVM-based projects such as Java/kotlin applications, Android apps, etc.
🔔 This library has been created from the Aminography repository and has been rewritten just to be included in mavenCentral()
This library contains three types of calendar systems as well as their conversion to each other.
Calendar System | Provider Class | Descriptions |
---|---|---|
Iranian | PersianCalendar | The most accurate solar calendar in use today. |
Islamic | HijriCalendar | A lunar calendar consisting of 12 lunar months in a year of 354 or 355 days. |
Gregorian | CivilCalendar | The common calendar which is used in most of the world. |
Japanese | JapaneseCalendar | The calendar which is used in Japan. |
- Add the mavenCentral() repository to your root build.gradle at the end of repositories:
allprojects {
repositories {
...
mavenCentral()
}
}
- Add the PrimeCalendar dependency in the build.gradle:
implementation group: 'com.apachat', name: 'primecalendar-android', version: '1.3.93'
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.apachat</groupId>
<artifactId>primecalendar-android</artifactId>
<version>1.3.93</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
Calendar objects can be instantiated by the class constructors or using CalendarFactory
.
Java
PrimeCalendar calendar = new PersianCalendar();
// or
PrimeCalendar calendar = CalendarFactory.newInstance(CalendarType.PERSIAN);
Kotlin
val calendar = HijriCalendar()
// or
val calendar = CalendarFactory.newInstance(CalendarType.HIJRI)
Exactly all of the standard Calendar
functionalities are implemented in PrimeCalendar
including set
, add
, roll
, etc.
val civil = CivilCalendar()
civil.set(2019, 5, 17)
println(civil.longDateString)
civil.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_YEAR, 192)
println(civil.longDateString)
civil.add(Calendar.WEEK_OF_YEAR, 14)
println(civil.longDateString)
civil.roll(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK, -3)
println(civil.longDateString)
---------------------------
> Monday, 17 June 2019
> Thursday, 11 July 2019
> Thursday, 17 October 2019
> Monday, 14 October 2019
Conversion of dates to each other is simply possible by calling the converter methods.
// Converting calendar instance to PersianCalendar:
val persian = calendar.toPersian()
// Converting calendar instance to HijriCalendar:
val hijri = calendar.toHijri()
// Converting calendar instance to CivilCalendar:
val civil = calendar.toCivil()
// Converting calendar instance to JapaneseCalendar:
val japanese = calendar.toJapanese()
Also, it is possible to convert an instance of java.util.Calendar
to an instance of PrimeCalendar
. For example:
import java.util.Calendar
val calendar = Calendar.getInstance()
// Converting to PersianCalendar:
val persian = calendar.toPersian()
There is a different way to use get
, set
, and add
methods. Using operators you can do it much simpler.
Suppose that the calendar
is an instance of PrimeCalendar
:
get
val year = calendar.get(Calendar.YEAR)
// equivalent operations:
val year = calendar[Calendar.YEAR]
val year = calendar.year
set
calendar.set(Calendar.MONTH, 7)
// equivalent operations:
calendar[Calendar.MONTH] = 7
calendar.set(Month(7))
calendar.set(7.month)
calendar.month = 7
add
calendar.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, 27)
// equivalent operations:
calendar[Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH] += 27
calendar += DayOfMonth(27)
calendar += 27.dayOfMonth
You can localize digits, month names, and week day names by passing locale in constructor. For Persian and Hijri calendars, the default locale is set to Farsi and Arabic respectively.
val persian = PersianCalendar()
println(persian.longDateString)
---------------------------
> پنجشنبه، ۲۳ خرداد ۱۳۹۸
val persian = PersianCalendar(Locale.ENGLISH)
println(persian.longDateString)
---------------------------
> Thursday, 23 Khordad 1398
For bugs, questions and discussions please use the Github Issues.