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Feature #20298

open

Introduce `Time()` type-cast / constructor.

Added by ioquatix (Samuel Williams) 2 months ago. Updated about 2 months ago.

Status:
Open
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:116938]

Description

Many Ruby primitive types have constructors, e.g. Integer(...), String(...), Float(...), etc. These usually convert from some subset of types, e.g. Float(1) -> 1.0 will convert an Integer to a Float, and Float("1") -> 1.0 will parse a String to a Float, and similar for other type casts/constructors.

I'd like to propose we introduce something similar for Time (and possibly this extends to Date/DateTime in a follow up proposal).

Suggested implementation could look something like this:

def Time(value)
  case value
  when Time
    value
  when Integer
    Time.at(value)
  when String # The format is assumed to be the result of `Time#to_s`.
    Time.new(value)
  else
    value.to_time
  end
end

Alternatively, we might like to be a little more specific with the else clause/error handling.

Background

In a project, I need to support multiple serialization formats/coders, including MessagePack, Marshal and JSON.

While Marshal and MessagePack are capable of serializing Time instances, JSON is not.

The code looks a bit like this:

data = fetch_job_data
job = @coder.load(data)
scheduled_at = Time(job[:scheduled_at]) # Hypothetical type-cast as outlined above

Additional Observations

While some primitive data types accept themselves as arguments and construct by copy, e.g. Array.new(Array.new), others do not, e.g. Hash and Time. Perhaps Time.new(Time.new) should behave similarly to Array.new(Array.new) - the outer instance is a copy of the inner.

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