>>You seem to be asking about counting work days. Ya, counting work days, or discounting non-work days. Two sides, same coin.
Thanks Joe. I think the nonweekendhours solution should be good enough for what I need. Yes, holidays too would be the best. But for practical purposes, excluding Sat&Sun is good enough for this particular problem. Thanks Everyone ! On Mon, Jun 7, 2021 at 3:46 PM Pavel Stehule <pavel.steh...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > po 7. 6. 2021 v 21:17 odesÃlatel Ron <ronljohnso...@gmail.com> napsal: > >> On 6/7/21 2:12 PM, David Gauthier wrote: >> >> Hi: >> >> I suspect I'm not the first to ask about this but couldn't find anything >> after googling for a bit. So here goes.... >> >> I'd like to get the "age" difference between two times which span either >> all or part of a weekend but exclude any time that transpired during the >> weekend. >> Example (please pardon the non-timestamp vals here...) >> >> age('Monday-Noon','Prev-Friday-Noon') >> would give me '1 day'. >> >> ...and... >> >> age('Sunday-Noon','Prev-Friday-Noon') >> would give me '12 hours' >> >> You get the picture. >> >> Has this wheel already been invented ? >> I don't see an easy way to do this off-hand. >> All Ears :-) >> >> Thanks in Advance. >> >> >> You seem to be asking about counting work days. Am I misunderstanding? >> > > orafce has functions for business calendar with holidays > > https://github.com/orafce/orafce > > plvdate.add_bizdays(day date, days int) date > > Regards > > Pavel > > >> -- >> Angular momentum makes the world go 'round. >> >