<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes" ?> <dspl targetNamespace="http://www.google.com/publicdata/dataset/google/time" xmlns="http://schemas.google.com/dspl/2010"> <info> <name> <value xml:lang="en">Google date and time</value> </name> <description> <value xml:lang="en">Google date and time dataset</value> </description> <url> <value xml:lang="en">http://code.google.com/apis/publicdata/docs/canonical/time.html</value> </url> </info> <provider> <name><value xml:lang="en">Google Inc.</value></name> <description><value xml:lang="en">Google Inc.</value></description> <url><value xml:lang="en">http://www.google.com</value></url> </provider> <concepts> <concept id="time_point"> <info> <name><value>Point in time</value></name> <description><value>Point in time, with a given granularity.</value></description> </info> <type ref="date"/> <attribute concept="granularity"/> </concept> <concept id="year" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Year date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with yearly granularity. The year concept is usually used directly in a slice definition to define a dimension that contains year. For example, a slice for yearly population by country would be defined as follows: <![CDATA[<slices> <slice id="country_slice"> <dimension concept="country"/> <dimension concept="time:year"/> <metric concept="population"/> <table ref="country_slice_table"/> </slice> </slices>]]> The table definition for this slice would be defined as follows: <![CDATA[<tables> ... <table id="country_slice_table"> <column id="country" type="text"/> <column id="year" type="date" format="yyyy"/> <column id="population" type="integer"/> <data> <file format="csv" encoding="utf-8">country_slice.csv</file> </data> </table> ... </tables>]]> And the data contained in the CSV file for this table would look like: country, year, population AF, 1960, 9616353 AF, 1961, 9799379 AF, 1962, 9989846 AF, 1963, 10188299 ... </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>YEARLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="quarter" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Quarter date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with quarterly granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>QUARTERLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="month" extends="time_point"> <info> <name> <value xml:lang="en">Month date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with monthly granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>MONTHLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="week" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Week date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with weekly granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>WEEKLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="day" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Day date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with daily granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>DAILY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="granularity"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Granularity</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> Granularity of time, i.e., the uncertainty that a point in time may be anywhere within some time interval. </value> </description> </info> <type ref="string"/> <table ref="granularity_table"/> </concept> </concepts> <tables> <table id="granularity_table"> <column id="granularity" type="string" /> <data> <file format="csv" encoding="utf-8">granularity.csv</file> </data> </table> </tables> </dspl>
time.xml
إنّ محتوى هذه الصفحة مرخّص بموجب ترخيص Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 ما لم يُنصّ على خلاف ذلك، ونماذج الرموز مرخّصة بموجب ترخيص Apache 2.0. للاطّلاع على التفاصيل، يُرجى مراجعة سياسات موقع Google Developers. إنّ Java هي علامة تجارية مسجَّلة لشركة Oracle و/أو شركائها التابعين.
تاريخ التعديل الأخير: 2025-07-25 (حسب التوقيت العالمي المتفَّق عليه)
[[["يسهُل فهم المحتوى.","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["ساعَدني المحتوى في حلّ مشكلتي.","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["غير ذلك","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["لا يحتوي على المعلومات التي أحتاج إليها.","missingTheInformationINeed","thumb-down"],["الخطوات معقدة للغاية / كثيرة جدًا.","tooComplicatedTooManySteps","thumb-down"],["المحتوى قديم.","outOfDate","thumb-down"],["ثمة مشكلة في الترجمة.","translationIssue","thumb-down"],["مشكلة في العيّنات / التعليمات البرمجية","samplesCodeIssue","thumb-down"],["غير ذلك","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["تاريخ التعديل الأخير: 2025-07-25 (حسب التوقيت العالمي المتفَّق عليه)"],[],["This document defines the \"Google date and time\" dataset, detailing time-related concepts and their granularities. Core concepts include `time_point`, `year`, `quarter`, `month`, `week`, `day`, and `granularity`. Each time concept extends `time_point` and specifies its granularity (e.g., `YEARLY`, `QUARTERLY`). The `year` concept demonstrates how to define a slice for yearly data and how related data is formatted within CSV files, like a country's population per year. A table is defined to map granularities.\n"]]