Date object wrapper supporting infinity
Project description
infdate
Python module for date calculations implementing a concept of infinity
Module description
Classes overview
└── GenericDate
├── InfinityDate
└── RealDate
The base class GenericDate should not be instantiated but can be used as a type annotation. In fact, it should be preferred over the other classes for that purpose.
InfinityDate can represent either past or future infinity. The module-level constants INFINITE_PAST and INFINITE_FUTURE contain the two possible InfinityDate instance variations.
RealDate instances represent real dates like the standard library’s datetime.date class, with mostly equal or similar semantics. The module -level constants REAL_MIN and REAL_MAX are the eqivalents of datetime.date.min and datetime.date.max as RealDate instances.
For any valid RealDate instance, the following is True:
infdate.MIN < infdate.REAL_MIN <= real_date_instance <= infdate.REAL_MAX < infdate.MAX
Module-level constants
- INFINITE_PAST = InfinityDate(past_bound=
True) → infinity before any date - INFINITE_FUTURE = InfinityDate(past_bound=
False) → infinity after any date - MIN = INFINITE_PAST
- MAX = INFINITE_FUTURE
- REAL_MIN = RealDate(
1,1,1) → the same date as datetime.date.min - REAL_MAX = RealDate(
9999,12,31) → the same date as datetime.date.max - MIN_ORDINAL =
1→ the same value as datetime.date.min.toordinal() - MAX_ORDINAL =
3652059→ the same value as datetime.date.max.toordinal() - RESOLUTION =
1→ represents the lowest possible date difference: one day
Module-level factory functions
The following factory methods from the datetime.date class are provided as module-level functions:
- fromtimestamp() (also accepting -math.inf or math.inf)
- fromordinal() (also accepting -math.inf or math.inf)
- fromisoformat()
- fromisocalendar()
- today()
Two additional factory functions are provided:
-
fromdatetime() to create a RealDate instance from a datetime.date or datetime.datetime instance (deprecated old name: from_datetime_object()).
-
fromnative() to create an InfinityDate or RealDate instance from a string, from None, -math.inf or math.inf (deprecated old name: from_native_type()).
This can come handy when dealing with API representations of dates, eg. in GitLab’s Personal Access Tokens API.
Differences between the infdate module classes and datetime.date
Some notable difference from the datetime.date class, mainly due to the design decision to express date differences in pure numbers (ie. float because math.inf also is a float):
-
infdate module classes have no max, min or resolution attributes, but there are module-level constants serving the same purpose.
-
The .toordinal() method returns int, math.inf, or -math.inf.
-
Subtracting a date from an InfinityDate or RealDate always returns an int, math.inf, or -math.inf instead of a datetime.timedelta instance.
-
Likewise, you cannot add or subtract datetime.timedelta instances from an InfinityDate or RealDate, only float or int (support for adding and subtracting datetime.timedelta instances might be added in the future, see the feature request).
-
infdate module classes have a .pretty() method that can be used to format RealDate instances with a format string like .strftime() (provided with the fmt argument that defaults to the ISO format
%Y-%m-%d), or to apply a custom format to InfinityDate classes using the inf_common_prefix, inf_past_suffix and inf_future_suffix arguments.
Example usage
>>> import infdate
>>> today = infdate.today()
>>> today
RealDate(2025, 6, 30)
>>> print(f"US date notation: {today:%m/%d/%y}")
US date notation: 06/30/25
>>> today.ctime()
'Mon Jun 30 00:00:00 2025'
>>> today.isocalendar()
datetime.IsoCalendarDate(year=2025, week=27, weekday=1)
>>> yesterday = today - 1
>>> yesterday.ctime()
'Sun Jun 29 00:00:00 2025'
>>> today - yesterday
1
>>> infdate.INFINITE_PAST
InfinityDate(past_bound=True)
>>> infdate.INFINITE_FUTURE
InfinityDate(past_bound=False)
>>> infdate.INFINITE_FUTURE - today
inf
>>> infdate.INFINITE_FUTURE - infdate.INFINITE_PAST
inf
InfinityDate and RealDate instances can be compared with each other, and also with datetime.date instances.
Subtracting InfinityDate or RealDate and datetime.date instances from each other also works:
>>> from datetime import date
>>> stdlib_today = date.today()
>>> stdlib_today
datetime.date(2025, 6, 30)
>>> today == stdlib_today
True
>>> yesterday < stdlib_today
True
>>> yesterday - stdlib_today
-1
>>> stdlib_today - yesterday
1
>>> stdlib_today - infdate.INFINITE_PAST
inf
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