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lib-recur

A recurrence processor for Java

This library parses recurrence strings as defined in RFC 5545 and RFC 2445 and iterates the instances. In addition it can be used to build valid recurrence strings in a convenient manner.

Check out the "recurrence expansion as a service" demo at http://recurrence-expansion-service.appspot.com

Please note that the interface of the classes in this library is not finalized yet and subject to change. We're going to refactor this to make it more object-oriented and make more classes immutable (in particular the RecurrenceRule class itself).

Requirements

rfc5545-datetime

RSCALE support

The iterator has support for RSCALE. At this time is supports four calendar scales:

  • GREGORIAN
  • JULIAN
  • ISLAMIC-CIVIL (aka ISLAMICC)
  • ISLAMIC-TBLA

RSCALE is supported in all RFC2445 and RFC5545 modes.

Recurrence Set API

In addition to interpreting recurrence rules, this library provides a set of classes to determine the result of any combination of rrules, rdates and exdates (and exrules, for that matter) as specified in RFC 5545.

Version 0.16.0 introduces a new API that is slightly different from the previous one. The new API fixes a few design issues that made the code more complex than necessary.

There is a new interface called RecurrenceSet that is implemented by a couple of adapters, decorators and composites. A RecurrenceSet represents the set of occurrences of a recurrence rule or list or any combination of them (including exclusions).

RecurrenceSet extends the Iterable interface, so it can be used with any Iterable decorator from the jems2 library and in for loops.

Iterating RRules

The most common use case is probably just iterating the occurrences of recurrence rules. Although you still can do this using the RecurrenceRuleIterator returned by RecurrenceRule.iterator(DateTime), you may be better off using the OfRule adapter that implements the Iterable interface.

Examples

RecurrenceSet occurrences = new OfRule(rrule, startDate);

You can combine this with the First or While decorators from the jems2 library to guard against infinite rules and use it to loop over the occurrences.

for (DateTime occurrence:new First<>(1000, // iterate at most/the first 1000 occurrences
    new OfRule(rrule, startDate))) {
    // do something with occurrence
}
for (DateTime occurrence:new While<>(endDate::isAfter, // stop at "endDate"
    new OfRule(rrule, startDate))) {
    // do something with occurrence
}

Handling first instances that don't match the RRULE

Note that OfRule does not iterate the start date if it doesn't match the RRULE. If you want to iterate any non-synchronized first date, use OfRuleAndFirst instead!

new OfRule(
    new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTHDAY=24;BYMONTH=5"),
    DateTime.parse("19820523"))

results in

19820524,19830524,19840524,19850524…

Note that 19820523 is not among the results because it doesn't match the rule as it doesn't fall on the 24th.

However,

new OfRuleAndFirst(
    new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTHDAY=24;BYMONTH=5"),
    DateTime.parse("19820523"))

results in

19820523,19820524,19830524,19840524,19850524…

Iterating RDates and ExDates

Similarly, iterating comma separated Date or DateTime lists (i.e. RDATE and EXDATE ) can be done with the OfList adapter.

Example

for (DateTime occurrence:new OfList(timeZone, rdates)) {
    // do something with occurrence
}

Combining multiple Rules and/or Lists

You can merge the occurrences of multiple sets with the Merged class. A Merged RecurrenceSet iterates the occurrences of all given RecurrenceSets in chronological order.

Example

RecurrenceSet merged = new Merged(
    new OfRule(rule, start),
    new OfList(timezone, rdates)
);

The result iterates the occurrences of both, the rule and the rdates in chronological order.

Excluding Exceptions

Exceptions can be excluded by composing occurrences and exceptions using Difference like in

RecurrenceSet withoutExceptions = new Difference(
    new OfRule(rule, start),
    new OfList(timezone, exdates));

This RecurrenceSet contains all the occurrences iterated by the given rule, except those in the exdates list. Note that these must be exact matches, i.e. the exdate 20240216 does not result in the exclusion of 20240216T120000 nor of 20240216T000000.

Fast forwarding

Sometimes you might want to skip all the instances prior to a given date. This can be achieved by applying the FastForwarded decorator like in

RecurrenceSet merged = new FastForwarded(
    fastForwardToDate,
    new Merged(
        new OfRule(rule, start),
        new OfList(timezone, rdates)));

Note, that new FastForwarded(fastForwardTo, new OfRule(rrule, start)) and new OfRule(rrule, fastForwardTo) are not necessarily the same set of occurrences.

Dealing with infinite rules

Be aware that RRULEs are infinite if they specify neither COUNT nor UNTIL. This might easily result in an infinite loop if not taken care of.

As stated above, a simple way to deal with this is by applying a decorator like First or While from the jems2 library:

RecurrenceRule rule = new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTHDAY=23;BYMONTH=5");
DateTime start = new DateTime(1982, 4 /* 0-based month numbers! */,23);
for (DateTime occurrence:new First<>(1000, new OfRule(rule, start))) {
    // do something with occurrence    
}

This will always stop iterating after at most 1000 instances.

Limiting RecurrenceSets

You can limit a RecurrenceSet to the instances that precede a certain DateTime using the Preceding decorator. This can also serve as a way to handle infinite rules:

RecurrenceRule rule = new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=MONTHLY;BYMONTHDAY=23");
DateTime start = new DateTime(1982, 4 /* 0-based month numbers! */,23);
for (DateTime occurrence:new Preceding<>(
    new DateTime(1983, 0, 1), // all instances before 1983
    new OfRule(rule, start))) {
    // do something with occurrence    
}

The Within decorator combines Preceding and FastForwarded and only iterates occurrences that fall in the given (right-open) interval.

// a RecurrenceSet that only contains occurrences in 2024
// (assuming the original iterates all-day values)
RecurrenceSet occurrencesOf2024 = new Within(
    DateTime.parse("20240101"),
    DateTime.parse("20250101"),
    recurrenceSet
);

Note, in both cases you must take care that the dates you supply have the same format (floating vs all-day vs absolute) as the occurrences of your recurrence set.

Determining the last instance of a RecurrenceSet

Finite, non-empty RecurrenceSets have a last instance that can be determined with the LastInstance adapter. LastInstance is an Optional of a DateTime value that's present when the given RecurrenceSet is finite and non-empty.

Example

new LastInstance(new OfRule(new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=DAILY;COUNT=10"), startDate));

RFC 5545 Instance Iteration Example

In a recurring VEVENT you might find RRULEs, RDATEs, EXDATEs and (in RFC 2445) EXRULEs. Assuming you have all these in variables with these respective names the RecurrenceSet might be constructed like in

RecurrenceSet occurrences = new Difference(
    new Merged(
        new OfRule(new RecurrenceRule(rrule), dtstart),
        new OfList(timezone, rdates)
    ),
    new Merged(
        new OfRule(new RecurrenceRule(exrule), dtstart),
        new OfList(timezone, exdates)
    )
);

Strict and lax parsing

By default, the parser is very tolerant and accepts all rules that comply with RFC 5545. You can use other modes to ensure a certain compliance level:

	RecurrenceRule rule1 = new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=WEEKLY;BYWEEKNO=1,2,3,4;BYDAY=SU", RfcMode.RFC2445_STRICT);
	// -> will throw an InvalidRecurrenceRuleExceptionException because in RFC 2445 BYWEEKNO is only valid in
	// combination with YEARLY rules

	RecurrenceRule rule2 = new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=WEEKLY;BYWEEKNO=1,2,3,4;BYDAY=SU", RfcMode.RFC2445_LAX);
	// -> will iterate Sunday in the first four weeks of the year

	RecurrenceRule rule3 = new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=WEEKLY;BYWEEKNO=1,2,3,4;BYDAY=SU", RfcMode.RFC5545_STRICT);
	// -> will throw an InvalidRecurrenceRuleExceptionException because in RFC 5545 BYWEEKNO is only valid in
	// combination with YEARLY rules

	RecurrenceRule rule4 = new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=WEEKLY;BYWEEKNO=1,2,3,4;BYDAY=SU", RfcMode.RFC5545_LAX);
	// -> will iterate Sunday in the first four weeks of the year

	RecurrenceRule rule5 = new RecurrenceRule("BYWEEKNO=1,2,3,4;BYDAY=SU;FREQ=WEEKLY", RfcMode.RFC2445_STRICT);
	// -> will throw an InvalidRecurrenceRuleExceptionException because in RFC 2445 the rule must start with "FREQ="

	RecurrenceRule rule6 = new RecurrenceRule("FREQ=MONTHLY;BYMONTH=4;", RfcMode.RFC2445_STRICT);
	// -> will throw an InvalidRecurrenceRuleExceptionException because the trailing ";" is invalid

The default mode for parsing rules is RfcMode.RFC5545_LAX. To support as many rules as possible use RfcMode.RFC2445_LAX;

Building rules

To build a rule you have to specify a base frequency and optionally an RfcMode. Then you can start adding BY* rules.

	RecurrenceRule rule = new RecurrenceRule(Freq.MONTHLY); // will create a new rule using RfcMode.RFC5545_STRICT mode

	rule.setCount(20);

	// note that unlike with java.util.Calendar the months in this list are 1-based not 0-based
	rule.setByRule(Part.BYMONTH, 1, 3, 5, 7);

	rule.setByRule(Part.BYMONTHDAY, 4, 8, 12);

	/*
	 * Alternatively set the values from a list or an array:
	 */ 
	Integer[] dayArray = new Integer[]{4, 8, 12};
	rule.setByRule(Part.BYMONTHDAY, dayArray);
	
	List<Integer> dayList = Arrays.asList(dayArray);
	rule.setByRule(Part.BYMONTHDAY, dayList);

	String ruleStr = rule.toString(); 
	// ruleStr is "FREQ=MONTHLY;BYMONTH=1,3,5,7;BYMONTHDAY=4,8,12;COUNT=20"

Related work

There are at least two other implentations of recurrence iterators for Java:

TODO

  • Add more tests
  • Add tests for edge cases
  • Add an RRuleBuilder to build RRULEs and make RecurrenceRule immutable
  • Add support for more calendar scales
  • Fix handling of calendar scales with leap months
  • Fix RecurrenceRule.toString() when RSCALE is set
  • Add validator and a validator log

License

Copyright (c) Marten Gajda 2024, licensed under Apache2.