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  • Date and time addition and subtraction, in part in support of such concepts as "last week," "this month", and "90 days from now."
  • Generating timestamps at the current instant.

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  • Calculating the duration of date and time ranges, in support of time-bounded entities, such as loans, exhibits, and temporary access permissions.
  • Identifying whether a specific date and time falls before, within, or after a date and time range.

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  • This service will allow customization - based on regular expressions or similar patterns - that will permit the use of other custom date and time input formats.
  • Wherever new dates are entered or generated throughout the CollectionSpace system, four-digit years are required.
  • For input date and time formats where years are represented with fewer than four digits (required to unambiguously designate years in the Gregorian Calendar), default assumptions about assigning these dates to a century will be used and documented.

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  • Named time periods refer to named, time-bounded events and/or abstractions such as "World War I", the "European Renaissance," the "Han Dynasty," and the "Mesozoic Era."
  • These names for time periods may incorporate, and thus be qualified by, topical, geographic (place), and/or cultural elements.
  • Services around named time periods seek to associate those periods with date ranges. These date ranges will have various confidence ranges, or variable degrees of likely accuracy. Searches on these time periods may need to reflect desired levels of accuracy.
  • Many early date ranges, particularly for earth sciences, life sciences, and similar disciplines, are typically measured in millions of years. Searches may need to reflect variability in the date measurement units that are used in various contexts.

Key Concepts

  • Especially things that become common sense, and so usually missed by new reviewers

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Services with potential dependencies on this service include:

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  • Ray Larson, faculty member, School of Information, UC Berkeley
  • Ryan Shaw, graduate Ph.D. student, School of Information, UC Berkeley

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