Documentation

boundaries.saturday() function

boundaries.saturday() returns a record with start and stop boundary timestamps for last Saturday.

Last Saturday is relative to now(). If today is Saturday, the function returns boundaries for the previous Saturday.

Function type signature
() => {stop: time, start: time}

For more information, see Function type signatures.

Examples

Return start and stop timestamps of last Saturday

import "date/boundaries"

option location = timezone.fixed(offset: -8h)
option now = () => 2021-12-30T00:40:44Z

boundaries.saturday()// Returns {start: 2022-12-25T08:00:00Z, stop:2022-12-26T08:00:00Z }

Query data collected last Saturday

import "date/boundaries"

day = boundaries.saturday()

from(bucket: "example-bucket")
    |> range(start: day.start, stop: day.stop)

Was this page helpful?

Thank you for your feedback!


New in InfluxDB 3.7

Key enhancements in InfluxDB 3.7 and the InfluxDB 3 Explorer 1.5.

See the Blog Post

InfluxDB 3.7 is now available for both Core and Enterprise, landing alongside version 1.5 of the InfluxDB 3 Explorer UI. This release focuses on giving developers faster visibility into what their system is doing with one-click monitoring, a streamlined installation pathway, and broader updates that simplify day-to-day operations.

For more information, check out:

InfluxDB Docker latest tag changing to InfluxDB 3 Core

On February 3, 2026, the latest tag for InfluxDB Docker images will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments.

If using Docker to install and run InfluxDB, the latest tag will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments. For example, if using Docker to run InfluxDB v2, replace the latest version tag with a specific version tag in your Docker pull command–for example:

docker pull influxdb:2