A collection of utilities for Scala/Java developers who are targeting Persian (Farsi) speaking users.
libraryDependencies ++= Seq(
"com.bahmanm" %% "persianutils" % "1.0"
)
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.bahmanm</groupId>
<artifactId>persianutils_2.10</artifactId>
<version>1.0</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
This is a short review of what you will find in persianutils:
com.bahmanm.persianutils.DateConverter
is the Scala port of the original algorithm (in Fortran) The Persian calendar for 3000 years.
NOTE: persianutils works with Scala 2.10.x series.
import com.bahmanm.persianutils.DateConverter._
// NOTE: months and days are 1-indexed, i.e. December is 12 or Farvardin is 1
val gDate1 = SimpleDate(2013, 12, 11)
val pDate1 = gregorianToPersian(gDate1)
print(pDate1) // OUTPUT: SimpleDate(1392,9,20) -> 20om Azar 1392
val pDate2 = SimpleDate(1392, 1, 1)
val gDate2 = persianToGregorian(pDate2)
print(gDate2) // OUTPUT: SimpleDate(2013,3,21) -> March 21st 2013
val d = java.util.Calendar.getInstance().getTime()
val gDate3 = SimpleDate(date) // iniatlising from a java.util.Date
val pDate3 = gregorianToPersian(gDate3)
val ds = "1392/09/24"
val pDate4 = SimpleDate(ds) // initialising from a String
val gDate4 = persianToGregorian(pDate4)
import com.bahmanm.persianutils.DateConverter;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
DateConverter.SimpleDate pd1 = new DateConverter.SimpleDate(1392, 11, 11);
DateConverter.SimpleDate gd1 = DateConverter.persianToGregorian(pd1);
System.out.println(gd1);
DateConverter.SimpleDate gd2 = new DateConverter.SimpleDate(2014, 2, 4);
DateConverter.SimpleDate pd2 = DateConverter.gregorianToPersian(gd2);
System.out.println(pd2);
}
}