* DateTimeExcel - Change Names of funcWhatever to evaluate
Per discussions while MathTrig was being broken up, this would help standardize the code. This PR applies that standardization to the DateTimeExcel family of functions.
The deprecation messages in DateTime.php are changed to match the style used in PR #2005.
All Phpstan grandfathered errors (about 25) in DateTimeExcel are fixed and removed from baseline. A small number (about 5) of phpstan annotations in the source members in that directory are also fixed and eliminated.
* Complete Breakup Of Calculation/DateTime Functions
In conjunction with parallel breakups happening in other areas of Calculation, this change breaks up all the DateTime functions into their own classes. All methods remaining in DateTime itself have a doc block deprecation notice, and consist only of stub code to call the replacement methods. Coverage of DateTime itself and all the replacement methods is 100%.
There is only one substantive change to the code (see next paragraph). Among the non-substantive changes, it now adopts the same parsing technique (throwing and catching exceptions) already in use in Engineering and MathTrig. Boolean parameters are allowed in lieu of numbers when Excel allows them. Most of the code changes involve refactoring due to the need to avoid Scrutinizer "complexity" failures in what it will consider to be new methods.
Issue #1936 was opened just as I was staging this. It is now fixed. One existing WORKDAY test was wrong (noted in a comment in the test data file), and a bunch of new tests are added.
I found it confusing to use DateTime as a node of the the class name since most of the methods invoke native DateTime methods. So, everything is moved to directory DateTimeExcel, and that is what is used in the class names.
There are several follow-up activities that I am planning to undertake if this PR is merged.
- ODS supports dates well before 1900. There are exactly 2 assertions for this functionality. More are needed (and some functions might have to change to accept this).
- WEEKDAY has some poorly documented extra options for "style" which are not yet implemented.
- Most tests have been changed to use a formula as entered on a spreadsheet rather than a direct call to the method which implements the formula. There are 3 exceptions at this time. WORKDAY and NETWORKDAYS, which include arrays as part of their parameters, are more complicated than most. YEARFRAC was just too large to deal with now.
- There are direct calls to the now-deprecated methods in both source code and tests, mostly in Financial code, but possibly in others as well. These need to be changed.
- Some constants, none "officially" documented, remain in the original class. These should be either deleted or marked deprecated. I wasn't sure if deprecation was even possible (or desirable), and did not want that to be something which would cause Scrutinizer to fail the change.
* Deprecate Now-unused Constants, Fix Yearfrac bug, Change 3 Tests
Add new DateTime/Constants class, initially populated with constants used in Weeknum.
MS has another inconsistency with how it handles null cells in Yearfrac. Change PhpSpreadsheet to behave compatibly with this bug.
I have modified YearFrac, WorkDay, and NetworkDays tests to be more to my liking. Many tests added to YearFrac because of the bug above. Only minor modifications to the existing tests for the others.
* 100% Coverage for Calculation/DateTime
The code in DateTime is now completely covered.
Along the way, some errors were discovered and corrected.
- The tests which have had to be changed at the start of every year are
replaced by more robust equivalents which do not require annual changes.
- Several places in the code where Gnumeric and OpenOffice were thought to differ
from Excel do not appear to have had any justification.
I have left a comment where such code has been removed.
- Use DateTime when possible rather than date, time, or strftime functions to avoid
potential Y2038 problems.
- Some impossible code has been removed, replaced by an explanatory comment.
- NETWORKDAYS had a bug when the start date was Sunday. There had been no tests
of this condition.
- Some functions allow boolean and null arguments where a number is expected.
This is more complicated than the equivalent situations in MathTrig because
the initial date for these calculations can be Day 1 rather than Day 0.
- More testing for dates from 1900-01-01 through the fictitious
everywhere-but-Excel 1900-01-29.
- This showed that there is an additional Excel bug - Excel evaluates
WEEKNUM(emptycell) as 0, which is not a valid result for
WEEKNUM without a second argument.
PhpSpreadsheet now duplicates this bug.
- There is a similar and even worse bug for 1904-01-01 in 1904 calculations.
Weeknum returns 0 for this,
but returns the correct value for arguments of 0 or null.
- DATEVALUE should accept 1900-02-29 (sigh) and relatives.
PhpSpreadsheet now duplicates this bug.
- Testing bootstrap sets default timezone. This appears to be a relic from
the releases of PHP where the unwise decision, subsequenly reversed,
was made to issue messages for
"no default timezone is set" rather than just use a sensible default.
This was a disruptive setting for some of the tests I added.
There is only one test in the entire suite which is default-timezone-dependent.
Setting and resetting of default timezone is moved to that test
(Reader/ODS/ODSTest), and out of bootstrap.
- There had been no testing of NOW() function.
- DATEVALUE test had no tests for 1904 calendar and needs some.
- DATE test changed 1900/1904 calendar in use without restoring it.
- WEEKDAY test had no tests for 1904 calendar and needs some.
- Which revealed a bug in Shared/Date (excelToDateTimeObject was not
recognizing 1904-01-01 as valid when 1904 calendar is in use).
- And an additional bug in that legal 1904-calendar values in the 0.0-1.0
range yielded the same "wrong" answers as 1900-calendar (see "One note" below).
Also the comment for one of the calendar-1904 tests was wrong in attempting
to identify what time of day the fraction represented.
I had wanted to break this up into a set of smaller modules, a process already
started for Engineering and MathTrig.
However the number of source code changes was sufficient that I wanted
a clean delta for this request.
If it is merged, I will work on breaking it up afterwards.
One note - Shared/Date/excelToDateTimeObject, when calendar-1900 is in use,
returns an unexpected result if its argument is between 0 and 1,
which is nominally invalid for that calendar.
It uses a base-1970 calendar in that instance. That check is not justifiable
for calendar-1904, where values in that range are legal,
so I made the check specific to calendar-1900,
and adjusted 3 1904 unit test results accordingly. However, I have to admit that
I don't understand why that check should be made even for calendar-1900.
It certainly doesn't match anything that Excel does.
I would recommend scrapping that code altogether.
If agreed, I would do this as part of the break-up into smaller modules.
Another note -
more controversially, it is clear that PhpSpreadsheet needs to support
the Excel and PHP date formats. Although it requires further study,
I am not convinced that it needs to support Unix timestamp format.
Since that is a potential source of Y2038 problems on 32-bit systems,
I would like to open a PR to deprecate the use of that format.
Please let me know if you are aware of a valid reason to continue to support it.
* Merge branch 'master' of C:\Projects\PHPOffice\PHPSpreadsheet\develop with conflicts.
* Argument fix
* Text Test functions refactored into individual test files
* Codestyle (line at eof)
* docblocks
* Merge branch 'master' of C:\Projects\PHPOffice\PHPSpreadsheet\develop with conflicts.
* Separate out date/time tests into individual tests
* Need to update the version of phpunit at some point to deal with the new assertions and deprecated assertions
* Appease the CS Gods
* More refactoring of Date/Time tests
* Replace self assertions with instance assertions (looking forward to upgrading phpunit)
* Finish refactoring of date/time tests as individual tests
* Test for DateTimeInterface rather than for DateTime
* A few strict comparisons
* Fix to test names