php-src/ext/calendar/julian.c
Peter Kokot 92ac598aab Remove local variables
This patch removes the so called local variables defined per
file basis for certain editors to properly show tab width, and
similar settings. These are mainly used by Vim and Emacs editors
yet with recent changes the once working definitions don't work
anymore in Vim without custom plugins or additional configuration.
Neither are these settings synced across the PHP code base.

A simpler and better approach is EditorConfig and fixing code
using some code style fixing tools in the future instead.

This patch also removes the so called modelines for Vim. Modelines
allow Vim editor specifically to set some editor configuration such as
syntax highlighting, indentation style and tab width to be set in the
first line or the last 5 lines per file basis. Since the php test
files have syntax highlighting already set in most editors properly and
EditorConfig takes care of the indentation settings, this patch removes
these as well for the Vim 6.0 and newer versions.

With the removal of local variables for certain editors such as
Emacs and Vim, the footer is also probably not needed anymore when
creating extensions using ext_skel.php script.

Additionally, Vim modelines for setting php syntax and some editor
settings has been removed from some *.phpt files.  All these are
mostly not relevant for phpt files neither work properly in the
middle of the file.
2019-02-03 21:03:00 +01:00

255 lines
7.9 KiB
C

/* $selId: julian.c,v 2.0 1995/10/24 01:13:06 lees Exp $
* Copyright 1993-1995, Scott E. Lee, all rights reserved.
* Permission granted to use, copy, modify, distribute and sell so long as
* the above copyright and this permission statement are retained in all
* copies. THERE IS NO WARRANTY - USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
*/
/**************************************************************************
*
* These are the externally visible components of this file:
*
* void
* SdnToJulian(
* zend_long sdn,
* int *pYear,
* int *pMonth,
* int *pDay);
*
* Convert a SDN to a Julian calendar date. If the input SDN is less than
* 1, the three output values will all be set to zero, otherwise *pYear
* will be >= -4713 and != 0; *pMonth will be in the range 1 to 12
* inclusive; *pDay will be in the range 1 to 31 inclusive.
*
* zend_long
* JulianToSdn(
* int inputYear,
* int inputMonth,
* int inputDay);
*
* Convert a Julian calendar date to a SDN. Zero is returned when the
* input date is detected as invalid or out of the supported range. The
* return value will be > 0 for all valid, supported dates, but there are
* some invalid dates that will return a positive value. To verify that a
* date is valid, convert it to SDN and then back and compare with the
* original.
*
* VALID RANGE
*
* 4713 B.C. to at least 10000 A.D.
*
* Although this software can handle dates all the way back to 4713
* B.C., such use may not be meaningful. The calendar was created in
* 46 B.C., but the details did not stabilize until at least 8 A.D.,
* and perhaps as late at the 4th century. Also, the beginning of a
* year varied from one culture to another - not all accepted January
* as the first month.
*
* CALENDAR OVERVIEW
*
* Julius Caesar created the calendar in 46 B.C. as a modified form of
* the old Roman republican calendar which was based on lunar cycles.
* The new Julian calendar set fixed lengths for the months, abandoning
* the lunar cycle. It also specified that there would be exactly 12
* months per year and 365.25 days per year with every 4th year being a
* leap year.
*
* Note that the current accepted value for the tropical year is
* 365.242199 days, not 365.25. This lead to an 11 day shift in the
* calendar with respect to the seasons by the 16th century when the
* Gregorian calendar was created to replace the Julian calendar.
*
* The difference between the Julian and today's Gregorian calendar is
* that the Gregorian does not make centennial years leap years unless
* they are a multiple of 400, which leads to a year of 365.2425 days.
* In other words, in the Gregorian calendar, 1700, 1800 and 1900 are
* not leap years, but 2000 is. All centennial years are leap years in
* the Julian calendar.
*
* The details are unknown, but the lengths of the months were adjusted
* until they finally stablized in 8 A.D. with their current lengths:
*
* January 31
* February 28/29
* March 31
* April 30
* May 31
* June 30
* Quintilis/July 31
* Sextilis/August 31
* September 30
* October 31
* November 30
* December 31
*
* In the early days of the calendar, the days of the month were not
* numbered as we do today. The numbers ran backwards (decreasing) and
* were counted from the Ides (15th of the month - which in the old
* Roman republican lunar calendar would have been the full moon) or
* from the Nonae (9th day before the Ides) or from the beginning of
* the next month.
*
* In the early years, the beginning of the year varied, sometimes
* based on the ascension of rulers. It was not always the first of
* January.
*
* Also, today's epoch, 1 A.D. or the birth of Jesus Christ, did not
* come into use until several centuries later when Christianity became
* a dominant religion.
*
* ALGORITHMS
*
* The calculations are based on two different cycles: a 4 year cycle
* of leap years and a 5 month cycle of month lengths.
*
* The 5 month cycle is used to account for the varying lengths of
* months. You will notice that the lengths alternate between 30 and
* 31 days, except for three anomalies: both July and August have 31
* days, both December and January have 31, and February is less than
* 30. Starting with March, the lengths are in a cycle of 5 months
* (31, 30, 31, 30, 31):
*
* Mar 31 days \
* Apr 30 days |
* May 31 days > First cycle
* Jun 30 days |
* Jul 31 days /
*
* Aug 31 days \
* Sep 30 days |
* Oct 31 days > Second cycle
* Nov 30 days |
* Dec 31 days /
*
* Jan 31 days \
* Feb 28/9 days |
* > Third cycle (incomplete)
*
* For this reason the calculations (internally) assume that the year
* starts with March 1.
*
* TESTING
*
* This algorithm has been tested from the year 4713 B.C. to 10000 A.D.
* The source code of the verification program is included in this
* package.
*
* REFERENCES
*
* Conversions Between Calendar Date and Julian Day Number by Robert J.
* Tantzen, Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery
* August 1963. (Also published in Collected Algorithms from CACM,
* algorithm number 199). [Note: the published algorithm is for the
* Gregorian calendar, but was adjusted to use the Julian calendar's
* simpler leap year rule.]
*
**************************************************************************/
#include "sdncal.h"
#include <limits.h>
#define JULIAN_SDN_OFFSET 32083
#define DAYS_PER_5_MONTHS 153
#define DAYS_PER_4_YEARS 1461
void SdnToJulian(
zend_long sdn,
int *pYear,
int *pMonth,
int *pDay)
{
int year;
int month;
int day;
zend_long temp;
int dayOfYear;
if (sdn <= 0) {
goto fail;
}
/* Check for overflow */
if (sdn > (LONG_MAX - JULIAN_SDN_OFFSET * 4 + 1) / 4 || sdn < LONG_MIN / 4) {
goto fail;
}
temp = sdn * 4 + (JULIAN_SDN_OFFSET * 4 - 1);
/* Calculate the year and day of year (1 <= dayOfYear <= 366). */
{
long yearl = temp / DAYS_PER_4_YEARS;
if (yearl > INT_MAX || yearl < INT_MIN) {
goto fail;
}
year = (int) yearl;
}
dayOfYear = (temp % DAYS_PER_4_YEARS) / 4 + 1;
/* Calculate the month and day of month. */
temp = dayOfYear * 5 - 3;
month = temp / DAYS_PER_5_MONTHS;
day = (temp % DAYS_PER_5_MONTHS) / 5 + 1;
/* Convert to the normal beginning of the year. */
if (month < 10) {
month += 3;
} else {
year += 1;
month -= 9;
}
/* Adjust to the B.C./A.D. type numbering. */
year -= 4800;
if (year <= 0)
year--;
*pYear = year;
*pMonth = month;
*pDay = day;
return;
fail:
*pYear = 0;
*pMonth = 0;
*pDay = 0;
}
zend_long JulianToSdn(
int inputYear,
int inputMonth,
int inputDay)
{
zend_long year;
int month;
/* check for invalid dates */
if (inputYear == 0 || inputYear < -4713 ||
inputMonth <= 0 || inputMonth > 12 ||
inputDay <= 0 || inputDay > 31) {
return (0);
}
/* check for dates before SDN 1 (Jan 2, 4713 B.C.) */
if (inputYear == -4713) {
if (inputMonth == 1 && inputDay == 1) {
return (0);
}
}
/* Make year always a positive number. */
if (inputYear < 0) {
year = inputYear + 4801;
} else {
year = inputYear + 4800;
}
/* Adjust the start of the year. */
if (inputMonth > 2) {
month = inputMonth - 3;
} else {
month = inputMonth + 9;
year--;
}
return ((year * DAYS_PER_4_YEARS) / 4
+ (month * DAYS_PER_5_MONTHS + 2) / 5
+ inputDay
- JULIAN_SDN_OFFSET);
}