1Date::ICal(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Date::ICal(3)
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6 Date::ICal - Perl extension for ICalendar date objects.
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9 $Revision: 678 $
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12 use Date::ICal;
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14 $ical = Date::ICal->new( ical => '19971024T120000' );
15 $ical = Date::ICal->new( epoch => time );
16 $ical = Date::ICal->new( year => 1964,
17 month => 10, day => 16, hour => 16,
18 min => 12, sec => 47 );
19
20 $hour = $ical->hour;
21 $year = $ical->year;
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23 $ical_string = $ical->ical;
24 $epoch_time = $ical->epoch;
25
26 $ical2 = $ical + $duration;
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28 (Where $duration is either a duration string, like 'P2W3DT7H9M', or a
29 Date::ICal::Duration (qv) object.
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31 $ical += 'P6DT12H';
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33 $duration = $ical - $ical2;
34 $ical3 = $ical - $duration;
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37 Date::ICal talks the ICal date format, and is intended to be a base
38 class for other date/calendar modules that know about ICal time format
39 also.
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42 Rich Bowen, and the Reefknot team. Alas, Reefknot is no more. See
43 http://datetime.perl.org/ for more modern and accurate modules.
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45 Last touched by $Author: rbowen $
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48 Date::ICal has the following methods available:
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50 new
51 A new Date::ICal object can be created with any valid ICal string:
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53 my $ical = Date::ICal->new( ical => '19971024T120000' );
54 # will default to the timezone specified in $TZ, see below
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56 Or with any epoch time:
57
58 my $ical = Date::ICal->new( epoch => time );
59
60 Or, better still, create it with components
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62 my $date = Date::ICal->new(
63 day => 25,
64 month => 10,
65 year => 1066,
66 hour => 7,
67 min => 15,
68 sec => 47
69 );
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71 If you call new without any arguments, you'll get a Date::ICal object
72 that is set to the time right now.
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74 my $ical = Date::ICal->new();
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76 If you already have an object in Date::ICal, or some other subclass
77 thereof, you can create a new Date::ICal (or subclass) object using
78 that object to start with. This is particularly useful for converting
79 from one calendar to another:
80
81 # Direct conversion from Discordian to ISO dates
82 my $disco = Date::Discordian->new( disco => '12 Chaos, YOLD 3177' );
83 my $iso = Date::ISO->new( $disco );
84 print $iso->iso;
85
86 new() handles timezones. It defaults times to UTC (Greenwich Mean Time,
87 also called Zulu). If you want to set up a time that's in the US
88 "Pacific" timezone, which is GMT-8, use something like:
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90 my $ical = Date::ICal->new( ical => '19971024T120000',
91 offset => "-0800");
92
93 Note that as of version 1.44, new() tries to be intelligent about
94 figuring out your local time zone. If you enter a time that's not
95 *explicitly* in UTC, it looks at the environment variable $TZ, if it
96 exists, to determine your local offset. If $TZ isn't set, new() will
97 complain.
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99 ical
100 $ical_string = $ical->ical;
101
102 Retrieves, or sets, the date on the object, using any valid ICal
103 date/time string. Output is in UTC (ends with a "Z") by default. To get
104 output in localtime relative to the current machine, do:
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106 $ical_string = $ical->ical( localtime => 1 );
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108 To get output relative to an arbitrary offset, do:
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110 $ical_string = $ical->ical( offset => '+0545' );
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112 epoch
113 $epoch_time = $ical->epoch;
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115 $ical->epoch( 98687431 );
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117 Sets, or retrieves, the epoch time represented by the object, if it is
118 representable as such. (Dates before 1971 or after 2038 will not have
119 an epoch representation.)
120
121 Internals note: The ICal representation of the date is considered the
122 only authoritative one. This means that we may need to reconstruct the
123 epoch time from the ICal representation if we are not sure that they
124 are in synch. We'll need to do clever things to keep track of when the
125 two may not be in synch. And, of course, the same will go for any
126 subclasses of this class.
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128 offset_to_seconds
129 $seconds_plus_or_minus = offset_to_seconds($offset);
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131 Changes -0600 to -21600. Not object method, no side-effects.
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133 offset_from_seconds
134 $seconds_plus_or_minus = offset_from_seconds($offset_in_seconds);
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136 Changes -18000 (seconds) to -0600 (hours, minutes). Not object method,
137 no side-effects.
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139 offset
140 $offset = $ical->offset;
141
142 # We need tests for these.
143 $ical->offset( '+1100' ); # a number of hours and minutes: UTC+11
144 $ical->offset( 0 ); # reset to UTC
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146 Sets or retrieves the offset from UTC for this time. This allows
147 timezone support, assuming you know what your local (or non-local) UTC
148 offset is. Defaults to 0.
149
150 Internals note: all times are internally stored in UTC, even though
151 they may have some offset information. Offsets are internally stored in
152 signed integer seconds.
153
154 BE CAREFUL about using this function on objects that were initialized
155 with an offset. If you started an object with:
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157 my $d = new(ical=>'19700101120000', offset=>'+0100');
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159 and you then call:
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161 $d->offset('+0200');
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163 you'll be saying "Yeah, I know I *said* it was in +0100, but really I
164 want it to be in +0200 now and forever." Which may be your intention,
165 if you're trying to transpose a whole set of dates to another
166 timezone--- but you can also do that at the presentation level, with
167 the ical() method. Either way will work.
168
169 add
170 $self->add( year => 3, month => 2, week => 1, day => 12,
171 hour => 1, minute => 34, sec => 59 );
172 $date->add( duration => 'P1WT1H1M1S' ); # add 1 wk, 1 hr, 1 min, and 1 sec
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174 Adds a duration to a Date::ICal object.
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176 Supported paraters are: duration, eom_mode, year, month, week, day,
177 hour, min, sec or seconds.
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179 'duration' is a ICalendar duration string (see duration_value).
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181 If a value is undefined or omitted, 1 is assumed:
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183 $ical->add( 'minute' ); # add a minute
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185 The result will be normalized. That is, the output time will have
186 meaningful values, rather than being 48:73 pm on the 34th of
187 hexadecember.
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189 Adding months or years can be done via three different methods,
190 specified by the eom_mode parameter, which then applies to all
191 additions (or subtractions) of months or years following it in the
192 parameter list.
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194 The default, eom_mode => 'wrap', means adding months or years that
195 result in days beyond the end of the new month will roll over into the
196 following month. For instance, adding one year to Feb 29 will result
197 in Mar 1.
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199 If you specify eom_mode => 'limit', the end of the month is never
200 crossed. Thus, adding one year to Feb 29, 2000 will result in Feb 28,
201 2001. However, adding three more years will result in Feb 28, 2004,
202 not Feb 29.
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204 If you specify eom_mode => 'preserve', the same calculation is done as
205 for 'limit' except that if the original date is at the end of the month
206 the new date will also be. For instance, adding one month to Feb 29,
207 2000 will result in Mar 31, 2000.
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209 All additions are performed in the order specified. For instance, with
210 the default setting of eom_mode => 'wrap', adding one day and one month
211 to Feb 29 will result in Apr 1, while adding one month and one day will
212 result in Mar 30.
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214 add_overload
215 $date = $date1 + $duration;
216
217 Where $duration is either a duration string, or a Date::ICal::Duration
218 object.
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220 $date += 'P2DT4H7M';
221
222 Adds a duration to a date object. Returns a new object, or, in the case
223 of +=, modifies the existing object.
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225 duration_value
226 Given a duration string, this function returns the number of days,
227 seconds, and months represented by that duration. In that order. Seems
228 odd to me. This should be considered an internal function, and you
229 should expect the API to change in the very near future.
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231 subtract
232 $duration = $date1 - $date2;
233
234 Subtract one Date::ICal object from another to give a duration - the
235 length of the interval between the two dates. The return value is a
236 Date::ICal::Duration object (qv) and allows you to get at each of the
237 individual components, or the entire duration string:
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239 $d = $date1 - $X;
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241 Note that $X can be any of the following:
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243 If $X is another Date::ICal object (or subclass thereof) then $d will
244 be a Date::ICal::Duration object.
245
246 $week = $d->weeks; # how many weeks apart?
247 $days = $d->as_days; # How many days apart?
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249 If $X is a duration string, or a Date::ICal::Diration object, then $d
250 will be an object in the same class as $date1;
251
252 $newdate = $date - $duration;
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254 clone
255 $copy = $date->clone;
256
257 Returns a replica of the date object, including all attributes.
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259 compare
260 $cmp = $date1->compare($date2);
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262 @dates = sort {$a->compare($b)} @dates;
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264 Compare two Date::ICal objects. Semantics are compatible with sort;
265 returns -1 if $a < $b, 0 if $a == $b, 1 if $a > $b.
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267 day
268 my $day = $date->day;
269
270 Returns the day of the month.
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272 Day is in the range 1..31
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274 month
275 my $month = $date->month;
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277 Returns the month of the year.
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279 Month is returned as a number in the range 1..12
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281 year
282 my $year = $date->year;
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284 Returns the year.
285
286 jd2greg
287 ($year, $month, $day) = jd2greg( $jd );
288
289 Convert number of days on or after Jan 1, 1 CE (Gregorian) to
290 gregorian year,month,day.
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292 greg2jd
293 $jd = greg2jd( $year, $month, $day );
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295 Convert gregorian year,month,day to days on or after Jan 1, 1 CE
296 (Gregorian). Normalization is performed (e.g. month of 28 means
297 April two years after given year) for month < 1 or > 12 or day < 1
298 or > last day of month.
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300 days_this_year
301 $yday = Date::ICal::days_this_year($day, $month, $year);
302
303 Returns the number of days so far this year. Analogous to the yday
304 attribute of gmtime (or localtime) except that it works outside of the
305 epoch.
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307 day_of_week
308 my $day_of_week = $date->day_of_week
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310 Returns the day of week as 0..6 (0 is Sunday, 6 is Saturday).
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312 hour
313 my $hour = $date->hour
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315 Returns the hour of the day.
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317 Hour is in the range 0..23
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319 min
320 my $min = $date->min;
321
322 Returns the minute.
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324 Minute is in the range 0..59
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326 sec
327 my $sec = $date->sec;
328
329 Returns the second.
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331 Second is in the range 0..60. The value of 60 is (maybe) needed for
332 leap seconds. But I'm not sure if we're going to go there.
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334 julian
335 my $jd = $date->jd;
336
337 Returns a listref, containing two elements. The date as a julian day,
338 and the time as the number of seconds since midnight. This should not
339 be thought of as a real julian day, because it's not. The module is
340 internally consistent, and that's enough.
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342 This method really only is here for compatibility with previous
343 versions, as the jd method is now thrown over for plain hash
344 references.
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346 See the file INTERNALS for more information about this internal format.
347
349 - add gmtime and localtime methods, perhaps?
350 - Fix the INTERNALS file so that it actually reflects reality
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353 Please see the file INTERNALS for discussion on the internals.
354
356 Rich Bowen (DrBacchus) rbowen@rcbowen.com
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358 And the rest of the Reefknot team. See the source for a full list of
359 patch contributors and version-by-version notes.
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362 datetime@perl.org mailing list
363
364 http://datetime.perl.org/
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366 Time::Local
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368 Net::ICal
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372perl v5.28.0 2011-07-05 Date::ICal(3)