MfGames Culture (CLI)
Provides a command line interface (CLI) for MfGames Culture.
License
MIT
Parsing
The following are examples with en_US
in the LANGUAGE
environment.
$ mfgames-culture parse 7/14/2017{"julian":2457948.5,"type":"instant","year":2017,"century":20,"millenniumCentury":0,"decade":201,"centuryDecade":1,"centuryYear":17,"decadeYear":7,"millennium":2,"yearDay":194,"yearMonth":6,"monthDay":13,"hour24":0,"meridiem":0,"hour12":0,"hourMinute":0,"minuteSecond":0}$
$ mfgames-culture parse 7/14/2017 --indent 2$
$ mfgames-culture parse 7/14/2017 --no-json --yamljulian: 2457948.5type: instantyear: 2017century: 20millenniumCentury: 0decade: 201centuryDecade: 1centuryYear: 17decadeYear: 7millennium: 2yearDay: 194yearMonth: 6monthDay: 13hour24: 0meridiem: 0hour12: 0hourMinute: 0minuteSecond: 0$
Options
--culture
string
Default: the process's culture
The culture key to use from inside the data file. For example, en-US
. Both underscore and dashes are tested.
--data
string
Default: the built-in mfgames-culture-data
source.
If this is given, then the culture files will be looked from the given directory instead of using mfgames-culture-data
.
--format
string
Default: use the library's heuristics for identifying format
If provided, then the format of the input will be compared only against the given format instead of testing against all valid ones.
--indent
number|'t'
Default: 0
If this provided, then it will be used to control how much indention is used for formatting JSON or YAML. If t
is provided, then JSON will be formatted with tabs.
--json, --no-json
boolean
Default: true
If true, then JSON output will be generated.
--type
'instant'|'period'
Default: instant
This will determine if the input is treated as an instant or a period.
--yaml, --no-yaml
boolean
Default: false
If this is true (--yaml
), then YAML output will be produced. If --no-json
isn't used, then JSON will also be printed to the output.
Formatting
The following are examples with en_US
in the LANGUAGE
environment.
$ mfgames-culture format 7/14/20177/14/2017 0:00 AM0:00 AM7/14/20177/14/2017 0:00 AM07/14/201707/14/2017 0:00:00 AMJul 14, 177/14/20177/14/2017 0:00 AM0:00 AM2017-07-142017-07-14 00:00:00$
$ mfgames-culture format 7/14/2017 --output-format 'YYYY-MM-DD'2017-07-14$
$ mfgames-culture format 7/14/2017 --output-style markdown-table| format | results || --------------------- | --------------------- || default | 7/14/2017 0:00 AM || h:mm tt | 0:00 AM || M/D/YYYY | 7/14/2017 || M/D/YYYY h:mm tt | 7/14/2017 0:00 AM || MM/DD/YYYY | 07/14/2017 || MM/DD/YYYY h:mm:ss tt | 07/14/2017 0:00:00 AM || MMM DD, YY | Jul 14, 17 || shortDate | 7/14/2017 || shortDateTime | 7/14/2017 0:00 AM || shortTime | 0:00 AM || YYYY-MM-DD | 2017-07-14 || YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss | 2017-07-14 00:00:00 |$
Options
--culture
string
Default: the process's culture
The culture key to use from inside the data file. For example, en-US
. Both underscore and dashes are tested.
--data
string
Default: the built-in mfgames-culture-data
source.
If this is given, then the culture files will be looked from the given directory instead of using mfgames-culture-data
.
--input-format
string
Default: use the library's heuristics for identifying format
If provided, then the format of the input will be compared only against the given format instead of testing against all valid ones.
--output-format
string
Default: show all formats
If provided, then the results will only be formatted with the given format, otherwise a table with all the formats will be printed.
--output-style
'bare'|'markdown-table'
Default: bare
Determines how the results are formatted and displayed. bare
just lists the formatted results, one on each line. markdown-table
shows a Markdown table with the format id in the first column and the formatted results in the other.
--type
'instant'|'period'
Default: instant
This will determine if the input is treated as an instant or a period.