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Represents a day of the week in the Gregorian calendar. For example, Tuesday.
Syntax
class weekday; // C++20
Remarks
A weekday can hold a value of [0, 255], but typically holds a value [0, 6] to represent a day of the week.
See Weekday constants, below, for constants that you can use with the weekday class.
Members
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| Constructors | Construct a weekday. | 
| c_encoding | Get the weekdayvalue. | 
| iso_encoding | Get the ISO 8601 weekdayvalue. | 
| ok | Check if the weekdayvalue is valid. | 
| operator++ | Increment the weekday. | 
| operator+= | Add the specified number of weekdays to this weekday. | 
| operator-- | Decrement the weekday. | 
| operator-= | Subtract the specified number of weekdays from this weekday. | 
| operator[] | Create a weekday_indexed or weekday_last from this weekday. | 
Non-members
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| from_stream | Parse a weekdayfrom the given stream using the specified format. | 
| operator+ | Add specified number of weekdays to this weekday. | 
| operator- | Subtract the specified number of weekdays from this weekday, or find the difference between twoweekdayobjects. | 
| operator== | Determine whether two weekdayobjects are equal. | 
| operator<< | Output a weekdayto a stream. | 
Requirements
Header: <chrono> Since C++20
Namespace: std::chrono
Compiler Option: /std:c++latest
Constructors
Constructs a weekday.
1) weekday() = default; // C++20
2) explicit constexpr weekday(unsigned wd) noexcept; // C++20
3) constexpr weekday(const sys_days& dp) noexcept; // C++20
4) explicit constexpr weekday(const local_days& dp) noexcept; // C++20
Parameters
dp
Construct a weekday using the day of the week dp.
wd
Construct a weekday with value wd.
Remarks
1) The default constructor doesn't initialize the weekday value.
2) Construct a weekday with the specified value.
If wd is 7, the weekday is constructed with a value of 0.
Don't initialize with values over 255 or the resulting weekday will have an unspecified value.
3) Computes what day of the week corresponds to the std::chrono::sys_days value dp, and constructs a weekday using that day.
4) Computes the day of the week that corresponds to the std::chrono::local_days value dp, and constructs a weekday using that day. It behaves as if you created the weekday using weekday(std::chrono::sys_days(dp.time_since_epoch())).
Example: Create a weekday
// compile using: /std:c++latest
#include <iostream>
#include <chrono>
using namespace std::chrono;
int main()
{
    weekday wd{ Wednesday };
    weekday wd2{ 3 };
    std::cout << wd << '\n' << wd2;
    
    return 0;
}
Wednesday
Wednesday
 c_encoding
constexpr unsigned c_encoding() const noexcept;
Return value
The weekday value.
 iso_encoding
The weekday value, but with Sunday (0) is interpreted as 7 per ISO 8601.
constexpr unsigned iso_encoding() const noexcept;
Return value
The weekday value.
 ok
Check if the value stored in this weekday is in the valid range.
constexpr bool is_leap() const noexcept;
Return value
true if the weekday value is in the range [0, 6]. Otherwise, false.
 operator++
Add 1 to the weekday value.
1) constexpr std::chrono::weekday& operator++() noexcept;
2) constexpr std::chrono::weekday operator++(int) noexcept;
Return value
1) A reference to *this weekday after it has been incremented (a postfix increment).
2) A copy of the weekday, before it has been incremented (a prefix increment).
Example: operator++
// compile using: /std:c++latest
#include <iostream>
#include <chrono>
using namespace std;
using namespace std::chrono;
int main()
{
    std::chrono::weekday wd{Thursday};
    std::cout << wd << " " << ++wd << "\n"; // constexpr weekday& operator++() noexcept
    std::cout << wd << " " << wd++ << "\n"; // constexpr weekday operator++(int) noexcept
    std::cout << wd << "\n";
    return 0;
}
Thu Fri
Fri Fri
Sat
Remarks
The incremented value is modulo 7. It will always be in the range [0, 6].
 operator--
Subtract 1 from the weekday value.
1) constexpr std::chrono::weekday& operator--() noexcept;
2) constexpr std::chrono::weekday operator--(int) noexcept;
Return value
1) A reference to *this weekday after it has been decremented (a postfix decrement).
2) A copy of the weekday before it has been decremented (a prefix decrement).
Example: operator--
// compile using: /std:c++latest
#include <iostream>
#include <chrono>
using namespace std;
using namespace std::chrono;
int main()
{
    weekday y = weekday{Thursday};
    cout << y << " " << --y << "\n"; // constexpr weekday& operator--() noexcept
    cout << y << " " << y-- << "\n"; // constexpr weekday operator--(int) noexcept
    cout << y << "\n";
    return 0;
}
Thu Wed
Wed Wed
Tue
Remarks
If the decremented result is less than 0, it's set to 6.
 operator+=
Add days to a weekday.
constexpr weekday& operator+=(const days& d) noexcept;
Parameters
d
The number of days to add.
Return value
The value of *this + d. The result will be modulo 7, in the range [0, 6].
 operator-=
Subtract days from the weekday.
constexpr weekday& operator-=(const days& d) noexcept;
Parameters
d
The number of days to subtract.
Return value
The value of *this - d. The result will be modulo 7, in the range [0, 6].
 operator[]
Create a weekday_indexed or weekday_last from this weekday.
1) std::chrono::weekday_indexed(*this, index) // C++20
2) std::chrono::weekday_last(*this) // C++20
Return value
1) std::chrono::weekday_indexed(*this, index)
2) std::chrono::weekday_last(*this)
Example: operator[]
// compile using: /std:c++latest
#include <iostream>
#include <chrono>
using namespace std;
using namespace std::chrono;
int main()
{
    constexpr auto firstMondayInJanuary =
        year_month_day{ Monday[2] / January / 2021y };
    std::cout << firstMondayInJanuary << "\n";
    constexpr auto lastMondayInJanuary = 
        year_month_day{ Tuesday[last] / January / 2021y };
    std::cout << lastMondayInJanuary << "\n";
}
2021-01-11
2021-01-26
Weekday constants
(C++20) The <chrono> header defines the following constants that you can use with weekday for greater convenience, type-safety, and maintainability of your code. These constants are in scope when std::chrono is in scope.
// Calendrical constants
inline constexpr std::chrono::weekday Sunday{0};
inline constexpr std::chrono::weekday Monday{1};
inline constexpr std::chrono::weekday Tuesday{2};
inline constexpr std::chrono::weekday Wednesday{3};
inline constexpr std::chrono::weekday Thursday{4};
inline constexpr std::chrono::weekday Friday{5};
inline constexpr std::chrono::weekday Saturday{6};
See also
weekday_last class
weekday_indexed class
<chrono>
Header Files Reference