GithubHelp home page GithubHelp logo

groupdate's Introduction

Groupdate

The simplest way to group by:

  • day
  • week
  • hour of the day
  • and more (complete list below)

🎉 Time zones - including daylight saving time - supported!! the best part

🍰 Get the entire series - the other best part

Supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, and Redshift, plus arrays and hashes (and limited support for SQLite)

💘 Goes hand in hand with Chartkick

Build Status

Installation

Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

gem "groupdate"

For MySQL and SQLite, also follow these instructions.

Getting Started

User.group_by_day(:created_at).count
# {
#   Sat, 24 May 2020 => 50,
#   Sun, 25 May 2020 => 100,
#   Mon, 26 May 2020 => 34
# }

Results are returned in ascending order by default, so no need to sort.

You can group by:

  • second
  • minute
  • hour
  • day
  • week
  • month
  • quarter
  • year

and

  • minute_of_hour
  • hour_of_day
  • day_of_week (Sunday = 0, Monday = 1, etc)
  • day_of_month
  • day_of_year
  • month_of_year

Use it anywhere you can use group. Works with count, sum, minimum, maximum, and average. For median and percentile, check out ActiveMedian.

Time Zones

The default time zone is Time.zone. Change this with:

Groupdate.time_zone = "Pacific Time (US & Canada)"

or

User.group_by_week(:created_at, time_zone: "Pacific Time (US & Canada)").count
# {
#   Sun, 08 Mar 2020 => 70,
#   Sun, 15 Mar 2020 => 54,
#   Sun, 22 Mar 2020 => 80
# }

Time zone objects also work. To see a list of available time zones in Rails, run rake time:zones:all.

Week Start

Weeks start on Sunday by default. Change this with:

Groupdate.week_start = :monday

or

User.group_by_week(:created_at, week_start: :monday).count

Day Start

You can change the hour days start with:

Groupdate.day_start = 2 # 2 am - 2 am

or

User.group_by_day(:created_at, day_start: 2).count

Time Range

To get a specific time range, use:

User.group_by_day(:created_at, range: 2.weeks.ago.midnight..Time.now).count

To expand the range to the start and end of the time period, use:

User.group_by_day(:created_at, range: 2.weeks.ago..Time.now, expand_range: true).count

To get the most recent time periods, use:

User.group_by_week(:created_at, last: 8).count # last 8 weeks

To exclude the current period, use:

User.group_by_week(:created_at, last: 8, current: false).count

Order

You can order in descending order with:

User.group_by_day(:created_at, reverse: true).count

Keys

Keys are returned as date or time objects for the start of the period.

To get keys in a different format, use:

User.group_by_month(:created_at, format: "%b %Y").count
# {
#   "Jan 2020" => 10
#   "Feb 2020" => 12
# }

or

User.group_by_hour_of_day(:created_at, format: "%-l %P").count
# {
#    "12 am" => 15,
#    "1 am"  => 11
#    ...
# }

Takes a String, which is passed to strftime, or a Symbol, which is looked up by I18n.localize in i18n scope 'time.formats', or a Proc. You can pass a locale with the locale option.

Series

The entire series is returned by default. To exclude points without data, use:

User.group_by_day(:created_at, series: false).count

Or change the default value with:

User.group_by_day(:created_at, default_value: "missing").count

Dynamic Grouping

User.group_by_period(:day, :created_at).count

Limit groupings with the permit option.

User.group_by_period(params[:period], :created_at, permit: ["day", "week"]).count

Raises an ArgumentError for unpermitted periods.

Custom Duration

To group by a specific number of minutes or seconds, use:

User.group_by_minute(:created_at, n: 10).count # 10 minutes

Date Columns

If grouping on date columns which don’t need time zone conversion, use:

User.group_by_week(:created_on, time_zone: false).count

Default Scopes

If you use Postgres and have a default scope that uses order, you may get a column must appear in the GROUP BY clause error (just like with Active Record’s group method). Remove the order scope with:

User.unscope(:order).group_by_day(:count).count

Arrays and Hashes

users.group_by_day { |u| u.created_at } # or group_by_day(&:created_at)

Supports the same options as above

users.group_by_day(time_zone: time_zone) { |u| u.created_at }

Get the entire series with:

users.group_by_day(series: true) { |u| u.created_at }

Count

users.group_by_day { |u| u.created_at }.to_h { |k, v| [k, v.count] }

Additional Instructions

For MySQL

Time zone support must be installed on the server.

mysql_tzinfo_to_sql /usr/share/zoneinfo | mysql -u root mysql

You can confirm it worked with:

SELECT CONVERT_TZ(NOW(), '+00:00', 'Pacific/Honolulu');

It should return the time instead of NULL.

For SQLite

Groupdate has limited support for SQLite.

  • No time zone support
  • No day_start option
  • No group_by_quarter method

If your application’s time zone is set to something other than Etc/UTC (the default), create an initializer with:

Groupdate.time_zone = false

Upgrading

6.0

Groupdate 6.0 protects against unsafe input by default. For non-attribute arguments, use:

User.group_by_day(Arel.sql(known_safe_value)).count

Also, the dates option has been removed.

History

View the changelog

Contributing

Everyone is encouraged to help improve this project. Here are a few ways you can help:

To get started with development and testing, check out the Contributing Guide.

groupdate's People

Contributors

ankane avatar codesnik avatar caulfield avatar zorab47 avatar leonelgalan avatar bjacobso avatar askl56 avatar wspurgin avatar trestrantham avatar tompesman avatar mochnatiy avatar mechanicles avatar rmm5t avatar hqm42 avatar kavu avatar mccallumjack avatar thedanotto avatar danandreasson avatar buhrmi avatar edestecd avatar pherris avatar hyfen avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.