rrule 0.1.2 rrule: ^0.1.2 copied to clipboard
🔁 Recurrence rule parsing & calculation as defined in the iCalendar RFC
🔁 Recurrence rule parsing & calculation as defined in the iCalendar RFC
How to use this package #
Note: This package uses time_machine for handling date and time. See its README for how to initialize it on Flutter or the web.
Create a RecurrenceRule
:
// Every two weeks on Tuesday and Thursday, but only in December.
final rrule = RecurrenceRule(
frequency: Frequency.weekly,
interval: 2,
byWeekDays: {
ByWeekDayEntry(DayOfWeek.tuesday),
ByWeekDayEntry(DayOfWeek.thursday),
},
byMonths: {12},
weekStart: DayOfWeek.sunday,
);
And get its recurrences by evaluating it from a start date:
final Iterable<LocalDateTime> instances = rrule.getInstances(
start: LocalDateTime.now(),
);
To limit returned instances (besides using RecurrenceRule.until
or RecurrenceRule.count
), you can use Dart's default Iterable
functions:
final firstThreeInstances = instances.take(3);
final onlyThisYear = instances.takeWhile(
(instance) => instance.year == LocalDate.today().year,
);
final startingNextYear = instances.where(
(instance) => instance.year > LocalDate.today().year,
);
Note: Convenience methods or parameters will be added soon to make these limitations easier.
Machine-readable String conversion #
You can convert between RecurrenceRule
s and iCalendar/RFC 5545-compliant String
s by using RecurrenceRuleStringCodec
or the following convenience methods:
final string = 'RRULE:FREQ=WEEKLY;INTERVAL=2;BYDAY=TU,TH;BYMONTH=12;WKST=SU';
final rrule = RecurrenceRule.fromString(string);
assert(rrule.toString() == string); // true
(Same RRULE as the first one)
Human-readable Text conversion #
You can convert a RecurrenceRule
to a human-readable String
s by using RecurrenceRule.toText()
:
// First, load the localizations (currently, only English is supported):
final l10n = await RruleL10nEn.create();
final rrule = RecurrenceRule.fromString(
'RRULE:FREQ=WEEKLY;INTERVAL=2;BYDAY=TU,TH;BYMONTH=12;WKST=SU');
final text = 'Every other week in December on Tuesday & Thursday';
assert(rrule.toText(l10n: l10n) == string); // true
(Same RRULE as the first one)
A few more examples:
RRULE:INTERVAL=4;FREQ=HOURLY
: Every 4 hoursRRULE:FREQ=DAILY;BYSETPOS=1,-2;BYMONTH=1,12;BYMONTHDAY=1,-1
: Daily in January & December on the 1st & 2nd-to-last instance of the 1st & last day of the monthRRULE:FREQ=WEEKLY;BYDAY=MO,TU,WE,TH,FR
: Weekly on weekdaysRRULE:INTERVAL=2;FREQ=WEEKLY
: Every other weekRRULE:FREQ=MONTHLY;BYDAY=-3TU
: Monthly on the 3rd-to-last TuesdayRRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYDAY=+13FR
: Annually on the 13th Friday of the yearRRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYSETPOS=1,-2;BYMONTH=1,12;BYWEEKNO=1,-1;BYYEARDAY=1,-1;BYMONTHDAY=1,-1;BYDAY=MO,WE
: Annually on the 1st & 2nd-to-last instance of every Monday & Wednesday that are also the 1st or last day of the month, that are also the 1st or last day of the year, that are also in the 1st or last week of the year, and that are also in January or December
While this already supports really complex RRULEs, some of them are not (yet) supported. See RecurrenceRule.canFullyConvertToText
for more information.
Limitations #
- leap seconds are not supported (limitation of the time_machine package)
- only years 0–9999 in the Common Era are supported (limitation of the iCalendar RFC, but if you have a use case this should be easy to extend)
Thanks #
The recurrence calculation code of RecurrencRule
s is mostly a partial port of rrule.js, though with a lot of modifications to use time_machine and not having to do date/time calculations manually. You can find the license of rrule.js in the file LICENSE-rrule.js.txt
.