I'm currently setting up a directory listing for a client and we want give the user more flexibility. So: Let the user set up blocks for days:
We have a day (integer 1-7), opens (time), closes (time) and some shops or sights have summer and winter opening times, or they make vacations. According to schema.org you have to add a valid_from (datetime) and a valid_through (datetime).
With this setup the user can create whatever he wants:
# migration
class CreateOpeningHours < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
create_table :opening_hours do |t|
t.integer :entry_id # your model reference
t.integer :day
t.time :closes
t.time :opens
t.datetime :valid_from
t.datetime :valid_through
end
end
end
Example for the model:
class OpeningHour < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :entry
validates_presence_of :day, :closes, :opens, :entry_id
validates_inclusion_of :day, :in => 1..7
validate :opens_before_closes
validate :valid_from_before_valid_through
# sample validation for better user feedback
validates_uniqueness_of :opens, scope: [:entry_id, :day]
validates_uniqueness_of :closes, scope: [:entry_id, :day]
protected
def opens_before_closes
errors.add(:closes, I18n.t('errors.opens_before_closes')) if opens && closes && opens >= closes
end
def valid_from_before_valid_through
errors.add(:valid_through, I18n.t('errors.valid_from_before_valid_through')) if valid_from && valid_through && valid_from >= valid_through
end
end
With that setup you can create easily a is_open? method in your model. Currently I did not setup the is_open? method, but if somebody needs, give me a hit! I think I will finish it in the next days.