Calcul des durées

  • Rversion finale: Xanadu
  • Mis à jour 1 août 2024
  • 3 minutes de lecture
  • Souvent, vous devrez fournir aux utilisateurs un moyen de spécifier quand une tâche ou un processus est dû. À l’aide de l’include de script DurationCalculator, vous pouvez calculer la date d’échéance à l’aide d’une durée simple ou d’une durée relative.

    En règle générale, la définition d’une date d’échéance nécessite que vous calculiez le temps de travail plutôt que le temps total. Seule la partie de la journée au cours de laquelle le travail est effectué est prise en compte lors de la détermination de la date d’échéance. Par exemple, une tâche arrive à échéance dans 10 heures, mais est limitée à un calendrier de jours ouvrables. Si les travaux débutent à 10h le lundi, ils sont dus le mardi à 12h comme calculé ci-dessous.
    10am-5pm on Monday (6 hours) + 8am-12pm on Tuesday (4 hours)

    Pour plus d’informations sur les calendriers, que vous pouvez utiliser comme entrées des méthodes DurationCalculator, consultez Création et utilisation de calendriers.

    Ce script montre comment utiliser DurationCalculator pour calculer une date d’échéance.

    /**
     * Demonstrate the use of DurationCalculator to compute a due date.
     * 
     * You must have a start date and a duration. Then you can compute a
     * due date using the constraints of a schedule.
     */
     
    gs.include('DurationCalculator');
    executeSample();
     
    /**
     * Function to house the sample script.
     */function executeSample(){
     
        // First we need a DurationCalculator object.var dc =new DurationCalculator();
     
        // --------------- No schedule examples ------------------
     
        // Simple computation of a due date without using a schedule. Seconds// are added to the start date continuously to get to a due date.
        dc.setStartDateTime("5/1/2012");if(!dc.calcDuration(2*24*3600)){// 2 days
        	gs.log("*** Error calculating duration");return;}
        gs.log("calcDuration no schedule: "+ dc.getEndDateTime());// "2012-05-03 00:00:00" two days later
     
        // Start in the middle of the night (2:00 am) and compute a due date 1 hour in the future// Without a schedule this yields 3:00 am.
        dc.setStartDateTime("5/3/2012 02:00:00");if(!dc.calcDuration(3600)){
            gs.log("*** Error calculating duration");return;}
        gs.log("Middle of night + 1 hour (no schedule): "+ dc.getEndDateTime());// No scheduled start date, just add 1 hour
     
     
        // -------------- Add a schedule to the date calculator ---------------------
        addSchedule(dc);
     
        // Start in the middle of the night and compute a due date 1 hour in the future.// Since we start at 2:00 am the computation adds the 1 hour from the start// of the day, 8:00am to get to 9:00am
        dc.setStartDateTime("5/3/2012 02:00:00");if(!dc.calcDuration(3600)){// 
            gs.log("*** Error calculating duration");return;}
        gs.log("Middle of night + 1 hour (with 8-5 schedule): "+ dc.getEndDateTime());// 9:00 am
     
        // Start in the afternoon and add hours beyond quiting time. Our schedule says the work day// ends at 5:00pm, if the duration extends beyond that, we roll over to the next work day.// In this example we are adding 4 hours to 3:00pm which gives us 10:00 am the next day.
        dc.setStartDateTime("5/3/2012 15:00:00");if(!dc.calcDuration(4*3600)){// 
            gs.log("*** Error calculating duration");return;}
        gs.log("Afternoon + 4 hour (with 8-5 schedule): "+ dc.getEndDateTime());// 10:00 am.
     
        // This is a demo of adding 2 hours repeatedly and examine the result. This// is a good way to visualize the result of a due date calculation.
        dc.setStartDateTime("5/3/2012 15:00:00");// for(var i=2; i<24; i+=1){if(!dc.calcDuration(i*3600)){// 
                gs.log("*** Error calculating duration");return;}
            gs.log("add "+ i +" hours gives due date: "+ dc.getEndDateTime());}
     
        // Setting the timezone causes the schedule to be interpreted in the specified timezone.// Run the same code as above with different timezone. Note that the 8 to 5 workday is// offset by the two hours as specified in our timezone.
        dc.setTimeZone("GMT-2");
        dc.setStartDateTime("5/3/2012 15:00:00");for(var i=2; i<24; i+=1){if(!dc.calcDuration(i*3600)){// 
                gs.log("*** Error calculating duration");return;}
            gs.log("add "+ i +" hours gives due date (GMT-2): "+ dc.getEndDateTime());}}
     
    /** 
     * Add a specific schedule to the DurationCalculator object.
     *  
     * @param durationCalculator An instance of DurationCalculator
     */function addSchedule(durationCalculator){//  Load the "8-5 weekdays excluding holidays" schedule into our duration calculator.var scheduleName ="8-5 weekdays excluding holidays";var grSched =new GlideRecord('cmn_schedule');
        grSched.addQuery('name', scheduleName);
        grSched.query();if(!grSched.next()){
            gs.log('*** Could not find schedule "'+ scheduleName +'"');return;}
        durationCalculator.setSchedule(grSched.getUniqueValue(),"GMT");}