elm package install elm-community/elm-timeDates may represent any date in the proleptic Gregorian calendar.
import Time.Date as Date exposing (Date, date)Use date to construct Date values.  If given invalid values for
the month and day, they are both clamped and the nearest valid date is
returned.
> date 1992 2 28
Date { year = 1992, month = 2, day = 28 } : Date
> date 1992 2 31
Date { year = 1992, month = 2, day = 29 } : Date
> date 1992 2 128
Date { year = 1992, month = 2, day = 29 } : DateUse year, month, and day to inspect Dates.
> birthday = date 1992 5 29
Date { year = 1992, month = 5, day = 29 } : Date
> Date.year birthday
1992 : Int
> Date.month birthday
5 : Int
> Date.day birthday
29 : IntsetYear, setMonth and setDay can be used to create new Dates
containing updated values for each respective field.  Like date,
these functions clamp their parameters and return the nearest valid
date.
addDays can be used to add an exact number of days to a Date.
addYears and addMonths add a relative number of years and months
to a date.  If the target date is invalid, these functions continually
subtract one day until a valid date is found.
> date 1992 1 31
|   |> Date.addYears 1
|   |> Date.toISO8601
"1993-01-31" : String
> date 1992 2 29
|   |> Date.addYears 1
|   |> Date.toISO8601
"1993-02-28" : String
> date 1992 1 31
|   |> Date.addMonths 1
|   |> Date.toISO8601
"1992-02-28" : StringDateTimes represent a Date together with a time offset from midnight.
import Time.DateTime as DateTime exposing (DateTime, dateTime)DateTimes can be constructed from a record using the dateTime
function or from a UTC timestamp in milliseconds using fromTimestamp.
To construct a DateTime using dateTime, pass it a record
containing fields for year, month, day, hour, minute,
second and millisecond:
> dateTime { year = 1992, month = 5, day = 29, hour = 0, minute = 0, second = 0, millisecond = 0 }
DateTime { date = Date { year = 1992, month = 5, day = 29 }, offset = 0 } : Date
> dateTime { year = 1992, month = 2, day = 31, hour = 0, minute = 0, second = 0, millisecond = 0 }
DateTime { date = Date { year = 1992, month = 2, day = 29 }, offset = 0 } : DateTo make constructing DateTimes less tedious, the library provides
Time.DateTime.zero:
> import Time.DateTime as DateTime exposing (DateTime, dateTime, zero)
> dateTime { zero | year = 1992 }
|   |> DateTime.toISO8601
"1992-01-01T00:00:00Z" : String
> dateTime { zero | year = 1992, month = 2, day = 28, hour = 5 }
|   |> DateTime.toISO8601
"1992-02-28T05:00:00Z" : StringUse fromTimestamp to construct a DateTime from a UTC timestamp in
milliseconds:
> fromTimestamp 0
|   |> DateTime.toISO8601
"1970-01-01T00:00:00Z" : StringSee examples/without-timezone for an example of how to construct
DateTimes from local time.
Like Time.Date, the DateTime module exposes functions for adding
to and updating a DateTime's fields.  The functions addYears and
addMonths have the same behaviour as their Time.Date counterparts.
ZonedDateTimes represent a DateTime in a specific TimeZone. See
examples/with-timezone for an example of how to use ZonedDateTimes.
import Time.TimeZones as TimeZones
import Time.ZonedDateTime as ZonedDateTime exposing (ZonedDateTime)