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Holi

Holi is a Clojure and ClojureScript library for working with non-business days

Examples

(ns my-app
  (:require [luciolucio.holi :as holi]
    [tick.core :as t]))

;      July 2019
; Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
;     1  2  3  4  5  6
;  7  8  9 10 11 12 13
; 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
; 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
; 28 29 30 31

(holi/add (t/date "2019-07-12") 3 :business-days) ; 2020-07-17 (skips weekends)
(holi/add (t/date "2019-07-03") 1 :business-days "US") ; 2019-07-05 (skips 4th of July as a US holiday)

(holi/weekend? (t/date "2019-07-06")) ; -> true
(holi/holiday? (t/date "2019-07-04") "US") ; -> true

Use of juxt/tick is not required (but highly recommended).

Install

Import the latest version from Clojars into your project dependencies.

ClojureScript is supported, but holi has only been tested when built with shadow-cljs and run on a browser. It should still work otherwise, but if you have issues with other setups, feel free to hit me up on Slack: @Lucio Assis

Usage

See the API docs for detail on holi's utilities: add, weekend?, holiday?, business-day? and non-business-day?.

A note on terminology

The term holiday calendar does not mean a calendar proper, as in "The 2022 calendar". For example, the US holiday calendar contains a rule that says "July 4th is a holiday, unless it falls on a weekend. If it's a Saturday (Sunday), the holiday will be observed the previous Friday (next Monday)". Apply that to 2022 and you get July 4th proper as a holiday, but for 2021 you'll get July 5th. A holiday calendar is not a collection of dates, but a set of rules that specify certain dates as holidays on any given year.

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