At work recently we found the need to check some dates in a database were correct. There’s a database table that for any given date provides both the date two working days before and two working days after. The system uses it to figure out when it should send transactions so that they complete on the correct day.

Anyway, I have been trying to learn Lisp for a while so as a side project I decided to write something to generate a CSV of the required dates so that I could check everything lined up and so that we have the next few years worth of dates ready.

Here’s the code, if you have any feedback I would greatly appreciate it as I am still really new to Common Lisp.

( defpackage :disco-date ( :use :cl ) ( :export :date-range :format-date :work-day? :next-day :prev-day :day-name :split-by-one-space :with-date :read-date :date-within-range? :date> :date> :make-date )) ( in-package #:disco-date ) ( defvar *day-names* ' (( 01 . "Mon" ) ( 02 . "Tue" ) ( 03 . "Wed" ) ( 04 . "Thu" ) ( 05 . "Fri" ) ( 06 . "Sat" ) ( 0 . "Sun" ))) ( defvar *bank-holidays* ()) ( defvar *months* ' (( 01 . 31 ) ( 03 . 31 ) ( 04 . 30 ) ( 05 . 31 ) ( 06 . 30 ) ( 07 . 31 ) ( 08 . 31 ) ( 09 . 30 ) ( 10 . 31 ) ( 11 . 30 ) ( 12 . 31 ))) ( defmacro with-date (( &key ( day ' #:unused-day ) ( month ' #:unused-month ) ( year ' #:unused-year ) ( day-of-week ' #:unused-day-of-week ) ( second ' #:unused-second ) ( minute ' #:unused-minute ) ( hour ' #:unused-hour ) ( tz ' #:unused-tz ) ( dst-p ' #:unused-dst-p )) date &body body ) "Take a date, split it up into it's parts and run the code in body." ` ( multiple-value-bind ( , second , minute , hour , day , month , year , day-of-week , dst-p , tz ) ( decode-universal-time , date ) ( declare ( ignorable , second , minute , hour , day , month , year , day-of-week , dst-p , tz )) ,@ body )) ( defun leap-year? ( year ) "Take a year and return T if a leap year, otherwise NIL" ( or ( and ( eql 0 ( mod year 4 )) ( not ( eql 0 ( mod year 100 )))) ( eql 0 ( mod year 400 )))) ( defun days-in-month ( month year ) "Takes a month,year and returns the number of days in it" ( if ( not ( eql month 2 )) ( cdr ( assoc month *months* )) ( if ( leap-year? year ) 29 28 ))) ( defun real-date? ( day month year ) "Take a day, month and year and return t if the date is valid, nil otherwise" ( if ( and ( > day 0 ) ( > month 0 ) ( > year 1000 ) ( <= month 12 ) ( <= year 3000 ) ( <= day ( days-in-month month year ))) t nil )) ( defun make-date ( day month year &optional ( hour 0 ) ( minute 0 ) ( second 0 )) "Take the different parts of a date and return a universal date" ( when ( real-date? day month year ) ( encode-universal-time second minute hour day month year ))) ( defun gregorian-weekday ( date ) ; Credit to someone in #emacs (consolers I think but I forget) "Return the day of week for the date given, 0 indexed so 0 for Sunday, 1 for Monday etc" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( mod ( + 0 ( * 365 ( 1- year )) ( floor ( 1- year ) 4 ) ( - ( floor ( 1- year ) 100 )) ( floor ( 1- year ) 400 ) ( floor ( - ( * 367 month ) 362 ) 12 ) ( if ( <= month 2 ) 0 ( if ( and ( = ( mod year 4 ) 0 ) ( not ( member ( mod year 400 ) ( list 100 200 300 )))) -1 -2 )) day ) 7 ))) ( defun file-lines ( path ) ; Credit to http://www.cl-user.net/asp/html-docs/process-file-snippset "Sucks up an entire file from PATH into a list of freshly-allocated strings, returning two values: the list of strings and the number of lines read." ( with-open-file ( s path ) ( loop for line = ( read-line s nil nil ) while line collect line into lines counting t into line-count finally ( return ( values lines line-count ))))) ( defun split-by-one-space ( string ) ; Credit to http://cl-cookbook.sourceforge.net/strings.html#reverse "Returns a list of substrings of string divided by ONE space each. Note: Two consecutive spaces will be seen as if there were an empty string between them." ( loop for i = 0 then ( 1+ j ) as j = ( position #\Space string :start i ) collect ( parse-integer ( subseq string i j ) :junk-allowed t ) while j )) ( defun read-date ( date-string ) "Take a string containing a date and return the date structure, or NIL if the string is in the wrong format" ( let (( loaded-date ( split-by-one-space date-string ))) ( if ( and ( equal ( length loaded-date ) 3 ) ( every 'numberp loaded-date ) ( real-date? ( car loaded-date ) ( cadr loaded-date ) ( caddr loaded-date ))) ( make-date ( car loaded-date ) ( cadr loaded-date ) ( caddr loaded-date )) nil ))) ( defun load-date ( filename ) "Take a filename and read a list of space separated dates into a list, returns the list" ( loop for line in ( file-lines filename ) collect ( split-by-one-space line ))) ( setf *bank-holidays* ( load-date "/var/www/lisp/bank-holidays.txt" )) ( defun bank-holiday? ( date ) "Return T if bank-holiday and nil otherwise" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( find date *bank-holidays* :test #' equal ))) ( defun next-day ( date ) "Take a date and return the next one" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( if ( not ( eql day ( days-in-month month year ))) ( make-date ( + 1 day ) month year ) ( if ( eql month 12 ) ( make-date 1 1 ( + 1 year )) ( make-date 1 ( + 1 month ) year ))))) ( defun prev-day ( date ) "Take a date and return the previous one" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( if ( not ( eql day 1 )) ( make-date ( - day 1 ) month year ) ( if ( eql month 1 ) ( make-date ( days-in-month 12 year ) 12 ( - year 1 )) ( make-date ( days-in-month ( - month 1 ) year ) ( - month 1 ) year ))))) ( defun weekday? ( date ) "Return the day number if a weekday, otherwise NIL" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( let (( day-of-week ( gregorian-weekday date ))) ( if ( and ( < day-of-week 6 ) ( > day-of-week 0 )) day-of-week NIL )))) ( defun work-day? ( date ) "Take a Date and return t if it's a working day, NIL otherwise" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( if ( and ( weekday? date ) ( not ( bank-holiday? date ))) T nil ))) ( defun x-working-days ( date x ) "Take a date and return the date of x working days afterwards (negative number for previous)" ( if ( eql 0 x ) date ( let (( current-date date ) ( i -1 )) ( loop until ( > i ( abs x )) when ( work-day? current-date ) do ( incf i ) when ( > ( abs x ) i ) do ( setf current-date ( if ( > x 0 ) ( next-day current-date ) ( prev-day current-date ))) finally ( return current-date ))))) ( defun return-dates ( date ) "Take a 'valueDate' and return the send and completion date" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( list date ( if ( work-day? date ) ( x-working-days date -2 ) ( x-working-days date -1 )) ( x-working-days date 2 )))) ( defun grab-dates ( start-date end-date ) "Get the send and completion date for every date in the range (inclusive), then return a list of 'um" ( let (( current-date start-date )) ( loop until ( equal current-date ( next-day end-date )) collect ( return-dates current-date ) do ( setf current-date ( next-day current-date ))))) ( defun format-number ( number ) "Take a number and return it as a string, put a 0 in front of it if it's single digits" ( if ( and ( > number -1 ) ( < number 10 )) ( format nil "0~A" number ) ( format nil "~A" number ))) ( defun format-date ( date ) "Take a date and return it as a nicely formatted string" ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( format nil "~A/~A/~A" ( format-number day ) ( format-number month ) year ))) ( defun day-name ( date ) ( with-date ( :day day :month month :year year ) date ( cdr ( assoc ( gregorian-weekday date ) *day-names* )))) ( defun date> ( first second ) "Returns nil if second date is larger than first, otherwise it returns first" ( with-date ( :day first-day :month first-month :year first-year ) first ( with-date ( :day second-day :month second-month :year second-year ) second ( if ( equal ( list first-day first-month first-year ) ( list second-day second-month second-year )) nil ( if ( or ( > first-year second-year ) ( and ( equal first-year second-year ) ( > first-month second-month )) ( and ( equal first-year second-year ) ( equal first-month second-month ) ( > first-day second-day ))) first nil ))))) ( defun date< ( first second ) "Returns nil if second date is smaller than first, otherwise it returns first" ( if ( date> second first ) first nil )) ( defun date-within-range? ( date max-date min-date ) "Return date if it's in-between the min and max dates, inclusively" ( if ( and ( or ( equal date min-date ) ( date> date min-date )) ( or ( equal date max-date ) ( date< date max-date ))) date nil )) ( defun date-range ( start end ) "Take two dates and return the inclusive range between them." ( if ( equal start end ) ( list start ) ( if ( date> start end ) ( cons start ( date-range ( prev-day start ) end )) ( cons start ( date-range ( next-day start ) end )))))

Here is the bank-holidays1.txt I used, it contains all the UK bank holidays for the next few years.

Feel free to use the bits I wrote for anything you want, any feedback of how I could improve things would be appreciated.

Cheers, Dave.

Edit:

I have taken some of the advice given in that comment, and I have tweaked the code. I noticed that transactions take three days to complete, inclusive of the send day. So while allowing two working days is usually enough, we need to allow three if we’re sending the transaction on a weekend or bank holiday. I also fixed a bug to get rid of a trailing space on all lines when printing the CSV.

Interestingly I did find some mistakes after comparing my results with a dump of the database’s table, so it was worth checking after all!

Next up I am going to take up the suggestion of using decode-universal-time and encode-universal-time . (Hopefully, that will mainly involve changing the with-date macro, we will see…)

Edit2:

I have sorted out the with-date macro and other parts of the code, so they now use proper universal time-stamps.

Also, I have been forced to learn how packages work to get Hunchentoot and co to work so I have now made this into a package that I can use from my other projects.