1Date::Manip::Base(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Date::Manip::Base(3)
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6 Date::Manip::Base - Base methods for date manipulation
7
9 use Date::Manip::Base;
10 $dmb = new Date::Manip::Base;
11
13 The Date::Manip package of modules consists of several modules for
14 doing high level date operations with full error checking and a lot of
15 flexibility.
16
17 The high level operations, though intended to be used in most
18 situations, have a lot of overhead associated with them. As such, a
19 number of the most useful low level routines (which the high level
20 routines use to do much of the real work) are included in this module
21 and are available directly to users.
22
23 These low level routines are powerful enough that they can be used
24 independent of the high level routines and perform useful (though much
25 simpler) operations. They are also significantly faster than the high
26 level routines.
27
28 These routines do NO error checking on input. Invalid data will result
29 in meaningless results. If you need error checking, you must call the
30 higher level Date::Manip routines instead of these.
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32 These routines also ignore all effects of time zones and daylight
33 saving time. One way to think of these routines is working with times
34 and dates in the GMT time zone.
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37 This class inherits several base methods from the Date::Manip::Obj
38 class. Please refer to the documentation for that class for a
39 description of those methods.
40
41 err
42 new
43 new_config
44 Please refer to the Date::Manip::Obj documentation for these
45 methods.
46
47 config
48 $dmb->config($var1,$val1,$var2,$val2,...);
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50 This will set the value of any configuration variable. Please refer
51 to the Date::Manip::Config manual for a list of all configuration
52 variables and their description.
53
55 In all of the following methods, the following variables are used:
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57 $date
58 This is a list reference containing a full date and time:
59
60 [$y, $m, $d, $h, $mn, $s]
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62 $ymd
63 A list reference containing only the date portion:
64
65 [$y, $m, $d]
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67 $hms
68 A list reference containing only the time portion:
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70 [$h, $mn, $s]
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72 $time
73 A list reference containing an amount of time:
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75 [$dh, $dmn, $ds]
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77 $delta
78 A list containing a full delta:
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80 [$dy, $dm, $dw, $dd, $dh, $dmn, $ds]
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82 $offset
83 A list containing a time zone expressed as an offset:
84
85 [ $offh, $offm, $offs ]
86
87 In all of the above, the elements ($y, $m, $d, $h, $mn, $s) are all
88 numeric. In most of the routines described below, no error checking is
89 done on the input. $y should be between 1 and 9999, $m between 1 and
90 12, $d between 1 and 31, $h should be between 0 and 23, $mn and $s
91 between 0 and 59.
92
93 $hms can be between 00:00:00 and 24:00:00, but an $offset must be
94 between -23:59:59 and +23:59:59.
95
96 Years are not translated to 4 digit years, so passing in a year of "04"
97 will be equivalent to "0004", NOT "2004".
98
99 The elements ($dy, $dm, $dw, $dd, $dh, $dmn, $ds) are all numeric, but
100 can be positive or negative. They represent an elapsed amount of time
101 measured in years, months, weeks, etc.
102
103 Since no error checking is done, passing in ($y,$m,$d) = (2004,2,31)
104 will NOT trigger an error, even though February does not have 31 days.
105 Instead, some meaningless result will be returned.
106
107 calc_date_date
108 calc_date_days
109 calc_date_delta
110 calc_date_time
111 calc_time_time
112 These are all routines for doing simple date and time calculations.
113 As mentioned above, they ignore all affects of time zones and
114 daylight saving time.
115
116 The following methods are available:
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118 $time = $dmb->calc_date_date($date1,$date2);
119
120 This take two dates and determine the amount of time between them.
121
122 $date = $dmb->calc_date_days($date,$n [,$subtract]);
123 $ymd = $dmb->calc_date_days($ymd,$n [,$subtract]);
124
125 This returns a date $n days later (if $n>0) or earlier (if $n<0)
126 than the date passed in. If $subtract is passed in, the sign of $n
127 is reversed.
128
129 $date = $dmb->calc_date_delta($date,$delta [,$subtract]);
130
131 This take a date and add the given delta to it (or subtract the
132 delta if $subtract is non-zero).
133
134 $date = $dmb->calc_date_time($date,$time [,$subtract]);
135
136 This take a date and add the given time to it (or subtract the time
137 if $subtract is non-zero).
138
139 $time = $dmb->calc_time_time(@time1,@time2 [,$subtract]);
140
141 This take two times and add them together (or subtract the second
142 from the first if $subtract is non-zero).
143
144 check
145 check_time
146 $valid = $dmb->check($date);
147 $valid = $dmb->check_time($hms);
148
149 This tests a list of values to see if they form a valid date or
150 time ignoring all time zone affects. The date/time would be valid
151 in GMT, but perhaps not in all time zones.
152
153 1 is returned if the the fields are valid, 0 otherwise.
154
155 $hms is in the range 00:00:00 to 24:00:00.
156
157 cmp
158 $flag = $dmb->cmp($date1,$date2);
159
160 Returns -1, 0, or 1 if date1 is before, the same as, or after
161 date2.
162
163 day_of_week
164 $day = $dmb->day_of_week($date);
165 $day = $dmb->day_of_week($ymd);
166
167 Returns the day of the week (1 for Monday, 7 for Sunday).
168
169 day_of_year
170 $day = $dmb->day_of_year($ymd);
171 $day = $dmb->day_of_year($date);
172
173 In the first case, returns the day of the year (1 to 366) for $y,
174 $m, $d. In the second case, it returns a fractional day (1.0 <=
175 $day < 366.0 or 1.0 <= $day < 367.0 for a leap-year). For example,
176 day 1.5 falls on Jan 1, at noon. The somewhat non-intuitive answer
177 (1.5 instead of 0.5) is to make the two forms return numerically
178 equivalent answers for times of 00:00:00 . You can look at the
179 integer part of the number as being the day of the year, and the
180 fractional part of the number as the fraction of the day that has
181 passed at the given time.
182
183 The inverse operations can also be done:
184
185 $ymd = $dmb->day_of_year($y,$day);
186 $date = $dmb->day_of_year($y,$day);
187
188 If $day is an integer, the year, month, and day is returned. If
189 $day is a floating point number, it returns the year, month, day,
190 hour, minutes, and decimal seconds.
191
192 $day must be greater than or equal to 1 and less than 366 on non-
193 leap years or 367 on leap years.
194
195 days_in_month
196 $days = $dmb->days_in_month($y,$m);
197
198 Returns the number of days in the month.
199
200 @days = $dmb->days_in_month($y,0);
201
202 Returns a list of 12 elements with the days in each month of the
203 year.
204
205 days_in_year
206 $days = $dmb->days_in_year($y);
207
208 Returns the number of days in the year (365 or 366)
209
210 days_since_1BC
211 $days = $dmb->days_since_1BC($date);
212 $days = $dmb->days_since_1BC($ymd);
213
214 Returns the number of days since Dec 31, 1BC. Since the calendar
215 has changed a number of times, the number returned is based on the
216 current calendar projected backwards in time, and in no way
217 reflects a true number of days since then. As such, the result is
218 largely meaningless, except when called twice as a means of
219 determining the number of days separating two dates.
220
221 The inverse operation is also available:
222
223 $ymd = $dmb->days_since_1BC($days);
224
225 Returns the date $days since Dec 31, 1BC. So day 1 is Jan 1, 0001.
226
227 leapyear
228 $flag = $dmb->leapyear($y);
229
230 Returns 1 if the argument is a leap year. Originally copied from
231 code written by David Muir Sharnoff <muir@idiom.com>.
232
233 nth_day_of_week
234 $ymd = $dmb->nth_day_of_week($y,$n,$dow);
235
236 Returns the $n'th occurrence of $dow (1 for Monday, 7 for Sunday)
237 in the year. $n must be between 1 and 53 or -1 through -53.
238
239 $ymd = $dmb->nth_day_of_week($y,$n,$dow,$m);
240
241 Returns the $n'th occurrence of $dow in the given month. $n must
242 be between 1 and 5 or it can be -1 through -5.
243
244 In all cases, nothing is returned if $n is beyond the last actual
245 result (i.e. the 5th Sunday in a month with only four Sundays).
246
247 secs_since_1970
248 $secs = $dmb->secs_since_1970($date);
249
250 Returns the number of seconds since Jan 1, 1970 00:00:00 (negative
251 if date is earlier).
252
253 $date = $dmb->secs_since_1970($secs);
254
255 Translates number of seconds into a date.
256
257 split
258 join
259 The split and join functions are used to take a string containing a
260 common type of time data and split it into a list of fields. The
261 join function takes the list and forms it into a string.
262
263 Rudimentary error checking is performed with both of these
264 functions and undef is returned in the case of any error. No error
265 checking is done on the specific values.
266
267 The following are allowed:
268
269 $date = $dmb->split("date",$string);
270 $string = $dmb->join("date",$date);
271
272 This splits a string containing a date or creates one from a list
273 reference. The string split must be of one of the forms:
274
275 YYYYMMDDHH:MN:SS
276 YYYYMMDDHHMNSS
277 YYYY-MM-DD-HH:MN:SS
278
279 The string formed by join is one of the above, depending on the
280 value of the Printable config variable. The default format is
281 YYYYMMDDHH:MN:SS, but if Printable is set to 1, YYYYMMDDHHMNSS is
282 produced, and if Printable is set to 2, the YYYY-MM-DD-HH:MN:SS
283 form is produced.
284
285 $hms = $dmb->split("hms",$string);
286 $string = $dmb->join("hms",$hms);
287
288 This works with the hours, minutes, and seconds portion of a date.
289
290 When splitting a string, the string can be of any of the forms:
291
292 H
293 H:MN
294 H:MN:SS
295 HH
296 HHMN
297 HHMNSS
298
299 Here, H is a 1 or 2 digit representation of the hours. All other
300 fields are two digit representations.
301
302 The string formed by the join function will always be of the form
303 HH:MN:SS.
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305 The time must be between 00:00:00 and 24:00:00.
306
307 $offset = $dmb->split("offset",$string);
308 $string = $dmb->join("offset",$offset);
309
310 An offset string should have a sign (though it is optional if it is
311 positive) and is any of the forms:
312
313 +H
314 +H:MN
315 +H:MN:SS
316 +HH
317 +HHMN
318 +HHMNSS
319
320 Here, H is a 1 or 2 digit representation of the hours. All other
321 fields are two digit representations.
322
323 The string formed by the join function will always be of the form
324 +HH:MN:SS.
325
326 The offset must be between -23:59:59 and +23:59:59 .
327
328 $time = $dmb->split("time",$string [,$no_normalize]);
329 $string = $dmb->join("time",$time [,$no_normalize]);
330
331 This works with an amount of time in hours, minutes, and seconds.
332 The string is of the format:
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334 +H:MN:S
335
336 where all signs are optional. The returned value (whether a list
337 reference from the split function, or a string from the join
338 function) will have all fields normalized unless $no_normalize is
339 passed in.
340
341 $delta = $dmb->split("delta",$string [,$no_normalize]);
342 $delta = $dmb->split("business",$string [,$no_normalize]);
343
344 $string = $dmb->join("delta",$delta [,$no_normalize]);
345 $string = $dmb->join("business",$delta [,$no_normalize]);
346
347 Both of these split a string containing a delta, or create a string
348 containing one. The difference is whether the delta is treated as a
349 business or non-business delta (see Date::Manip::Delta
350 documentation for a detailed description).
351
352 The string that can be split is of the form:
353
354 +Y:M:+W:+D:H:MN:S
355
356 All signs are optional in the string being split. The string
357 produced is of the form +Y:M:+W:D:H:MN:S (for a non-business delta)
358 or +Y:M:+W:+D:H:MN:S (for a business delta).
359
360 Fields may be omitted entirely. For example:
361
362 D:H:MN:S
363 D:::S
364
365 are both valid.
366
367 The string or list output is normalized unless $no_normalize is
368 passed in.
369
370 week1_day1
371 $ymd = $dmb->week1_day1($y);
372
373 This returns the date of the 1st day of the 1st week in the given
374 year. Note that this uses the ISO 8601 definition of week, so the
375 year returned may be the year before the one passed in.
376
377 This uses the FirstDay and Jan1Week1 config variables to evaluate
378 the results.
379
380 weeks_in_year
381 $w = $dmb->weeks_in_year($y);
382
383 This returns the number of ISO 8601 weeks in the year. It will
384 always be 52 or 53.
385
386 week_of_year
387 ($y,$w) = $dmb->week_of_year($date);
388 ($y,$w) = $dmb->week_of_year($ymd);
389
390 This returns the week number (1-53) of the given date and the year
391 that it falls in. Since the ISO 8601 definition of a week is used,
392 the year returned is not necessarily the one passed in (it may
393 differ for the first or last week of the year).
394
395 The inverse operation is also available:
396
397 $ymd = $dmb->week_of_year($y,$w);
398
399 which returns the first day of the given week.
400
401 This uses the FirstDay and Jan1Week1 config variables to evaluate
402 the results.
403
405 None known.
406
408 Please refer to the Date::Manip::Problems documentation for information
409 on submitting bug reports or questions to the author.
410
412 Date::Manip - main module documentation
413
415 This script is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
416 under the same terms as Perl itself.
417
419 Sullivan Beck (sbeck@cpan.org)
420
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423perl v5.16.3 2014-06-09 Date::Manip::Base(3)