If you work with the opening_hours
fields in OpenStreetMap, you probably need to check somewhere if a field is valid before to parse it, or to do anything with it.
Of course, for simple formats, can do this with regexes, but specifications are so rich that a full regex to handle them is quite impossible.
This is the goal of this tiny module: check if an opening_hours
field is valid, and try to correct it if it isn't.
In addition to the simple formats, like Mo-Fr 10:00-20:00
, it can parse and fix almost all shapes of opening hours.
Here is what it can do.
>>> from oh_sanitizer import sanitize_field
>>> print(sanitize_field("mo-fr 10h - 19h00"))
"Mo-Fr 10:00-19:00"
>>> print(sanitize_field("2010 - 2020/2 dec-feb 10:00 am - 12:00 am/1:00 pm-7:00pm"))
"2010-2020/2 Dec-Feb 10:00-12:00,13:00-19:00"
It works both with Python 2 and 3.
It is so small that you can include it directly into your projet. You can also install it with PyPi:
$ pip install oh-sanitizer
The sanitize_field()
function can raise the following exceptions:
TypeError
: If the given field is not a string.SanitizeError
: The generic exception of oh_sanitizer
,
raised when the field can't be parsed (if it is too complex,
or "too much invalid").InconsistentField
: Inheriting from SanitizeError
,
raised when the field contains an invalid pattern which can't
be corrected automatically.So, you can simple do this.
from oh_sanitizer import sanitize_field, SanitizeError
field = "mo-fr 10h - 19h00"
try:
sanitized_field = sanitize_field(field)
print("Here is the sanitized field:", sanitized_field)
except SanitizeError:
print("So bad, the field could not be sanitized.")
If you want to parse opening_hours
fields to know, for example, whether a facility is open, OH Sanitizer is NOT what you need.
See the Humanized Opening Hours module or its alternatives.