DateTime calculations in business hours
$ composer require florianv/business
First you need to configure your business schedule:
use Business\SpecialDay;
use Business\Day;
use Business\Days;
use Business\Business;
use Business\Holidays;
use Business\DateTimePeriod;
// Opening hours for each week day. If not specified, it is considered closed
$days = [
// Standard days with fixed opening hours
new Day(Days::MONDAY, [['09:00', '13:00'], ['2pm', '5 PM']]),
new Day(Days::TUESDAY, [['9 AM', '5 PM']]),
new Day(Days::WEDNESDAY, [['10:00', '13:00'], ['14:00', '17:00']]),
new Day(Days::THURSDAY, [['10 AM', '5 PM']]),
// Special day with dynamic opening hours depending on the date
new SpecialDay(Days::FRIDAY, function (\DateTime $date) {
if ('2015-05-29' === $date->format('Y-m-d')) {
return [['9 AM', '12:00']];
}
return [['9 AM', '5 PM']];
}),
];
// Optional holiday dates
$holidays = new Holidays([
new \DateTime('2015-01-01'),
new \DateTime('2015-01-02'),
new DateTimePeriod(new \DateTime('2015-07-08'), new \DateTime('2015-07-11')),
]);
// Optional business timezone
$timezone = new \DateTimeZone('Europe/Paris');
// Create a new Business instance
$business = new Business($days, $holidays, $timezone);
$bool = $business->within(new \DateTime('2015-05-11 10:00'));
$start = new \DateTime('2015-05-11 10:00');
$end = new \DateTime('2015-05-14 10:00');
$interval = new \DateInterval('P1D');
$dates = $business->timeline($start, $end, $interval);
// After that date (including it)
$nextDate = $business->closest(new \DateTime('2015-05-11 10:00'));
// Before that date (including it)
$lastDate = $business->closest(new \DateTime('2015-05-11 10:00'), Business::CLOSEST_LAST);
The Business
class can be serialized so it can be stored for later reuse:
$serialized = serialize($business);
$business = unserialize($serialized);
If you use SpecialDay
instances, you need to install the jeremeamia/superclosure
library providing closure serialization:
$ composer require jeremeamia/superclosure