Time#monday?() is a Time class method which checks whether the time represents Monday.
Ruby
Output :
Ruby
Output :
Syntax: Time.monday?() Parameter: Time values Return: true - if the time represents Monday otherwise falseExample #1 :
# Ruby code for Time.monday?() method
# declaring time
a = Time.new(2019)
# declaring time
b = Time.new(2019, 10)
# declaring time
c = Time.new(2019, 12, 31)
# Time
puts "Time a : #{a}\n\n"
puts "Time b : #{b}\n\n"
puts "Time c : #{c}\n\n\n\n"
# monday? form
puts "Time a monday? form : #{a.monday?}\n\n"
puts "Time b monday? form : #{b.monday?}\n\n"
puts "Time c monday? form : #{c.monday?}\n\n"
Time a : 2019-01-01 00:00:00 +0100 Time b : 2019-10-01 00:00:00 +0200 Time c : 2019-12-31 00:00:00 +0100 Time a monday? form : false Time b monday? form : false Time c monday? form : falseExample #2 :
# Ruby code for Time.monday?() method
# declaring time
a = Time.now
# declaring time
b = Time.new(1000, 10, 10)
# declaring time
c = Time.new(2020, 12)
# Time
puts "Time a : #{a}\n\n"
puts "Time b : #{b}\n\n"
puts "Time c : #{c}\n\n\n\n"
# monday? form
puts "Time a monday? form : #{a.monday?}\n\n"
puts "Time b monday? form : #{b.monday?}\n\n"
puts "Time c monday? form : #{c.monday?}\n\n"
Time a : 2019-08-27 04:00:19 +0200 Time b : 1000-10-10 00:00:00 +0053 Time c : 2020-12-01 00:00:00 +0100 Time a monday? form : false Time b monday? form : false Time c monday? form : false