1Date::HolidayParser(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentationDate::HolidayParser(3)
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6 Date::HolidayParser - Parser for .holiday-files
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9 0.4
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12 This module parses .holiday files. These are files that define holidays
13 in various parts of the world in an easy to read and easy to write (but
14 hard to parse due to its very flexible syntax) format.
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16 This module returns a hash that you can read and use within your
17 program.
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19 use Date::HolidayParser;
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21 my $Holidays = Date::HolidayParser->new("$ENV{HOME}/.holiday");
22 my $Holidays_2006 = $Holidays->get(2006);
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24 ...
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27 This is a module that parses .holiday-style files. These are files that
28 define holidays in various parts of the world. The files are easy to
29 write and easy for humans to read, but can be hard to parse because the
30 format allows many different ways to write it.
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32 This module parses the files for you and returns a hash reference that
33 you can use within your perl program in whatever way you wish.
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36 This module doesn't export anything by default. It can however export
37 the EasterCalc function upon request by issuing
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39 use Date::HolidayParser qw(EasterCalc);
40 ...
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43 $object = Date::HolidayParser->new(FILE);
44 This is the main function. It creates a new Date::HolidayParser object
45 for FILE and parses the file.
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47 FILE must be the full path to the holiday file you want to parse.
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49 $object->get(YEAR);
50 This gets the holidays for YEAR. It uses the already parsed FILE and
51 calculates the holidays in YEAR and returns a hashref with the parsed
52 data or undef on failure.
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54 YEAR must be a full year (ie. 2006) not a year relative to 1900 (ie.
55 106).
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57 See the section HASH SYNTAX below for the syntax of the returned
58 hashref.
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60 Date::HolidayParser::EasterCalc
61 This is an addition to the real functions that Date::HolidayParser
62 provides. It's needed inside of the module but might also be useful
63 for others and thus made available.
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65 use Date::HolidayParser;
66 my $Easter = Date::HolidayParser::EasterCalc(YEAR);
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68 YEAR must be a full year (ie. 2006) not a year relative to 1900 (ie.
69 106).
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71 It returns the day of easter of the year supplied.
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73 NOTE: The day returned begins on 0. This means that the days returned
74 are 0-364 instead of 1-365.
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77 Attributes can be supplied to the constructor as a parameter after the
78 file parameter (ie. Date::HolidayParser->new('file', attribute =>
79 "value");), or you can use $object->attribute(VALUE).
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81 silent
82 If true this will make Date::HolidayParser not output any warnings
83 (such as syntax errors).
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86 The returned hash is in the following format:
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88 \%HasRef = (
89 'MONTH (1-12)' => {
90 'DAY OF THE MONTH (1-31)' => {
91 'NAME OF THE HOLIDAY' => 'TYPE OF HOLIDAY'
92 }
93 }
94 );
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96 MONTH is a numeric month in the range 1-12.
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98 DAY OF THE MONTH is a numeric day relative to the month in the range
99 1-31 (max).
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101 NAME OF THE HOLIDAY is the name of the holiday as set by the
102 .holiday-file.
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104 TYPE OF HOLIDAY is the type of holiday it is. It is one of the
105 following:
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107 · "none" means that it is a normal day.
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109 · "red" means that it is a "red" day (ie. public holiday/day off).
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112 Here is an example of the module in use. The UK holiday file was
113 chosen because it is rather small and simple.
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115 The holiday file
116 :
117 : UK holiday file. Copy to ~/.holiday
118 :
119 : Author: Peter Lord <plord@uel.co.uk>
120 :
121 "New Years Day" red on 1/1
122 "Easter Sunday" red on easter
123 "Good Friday" red on easter minus 2
124 "Easter Monday" red on easter plus 1
125 "May Day" red on first monday in may
126 "Spring Bank Holiday" red on last monday in may
127 "Summer Bank Holiday" red on last monday in august
128 "Christmas Day" red on 12/25
129 "Boxing Day" red on 12/26
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131 The program
132 #!/usr/bin/perl
133 use warnings;
134 use strict;
135 use Data::Dumper;
136 use Date::HolidayParser;
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138 # Call Date::HolidayParser to parse the file
139 my $Holidays = Date::HolidayParser->new(/path/to/file);
140 my $Holidays_2006 = $Holidays->get(2006);
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142 # Set a proper Data::Dumper format and dump the data returned by Date::HolidayParser to STDOUT
143 $Data::Dumper::Purity = 1; $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = 1; $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1;
144 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$Holidays_2006], ["*Holidays_2006"]);
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146 The output
147 %Holidays_2006 = (
148 '1' => {
149 '1' => {
150 'New Years Day' => 'red'
151 }
152 },
153 '12' => {
154 '25' => {
155 'Christmas Day' => 'red'
156 },
157 '26' => {
158 'Boxing Day' => 'red'
159 }
160 },
161 '4' => {
162 '14' => {
163 'Good Friday' => 'red'
164 },
165 '16' => {
166 'Easter Sunday' => 'red'
167 },
168 '17' => {
169 'Easter Monday' => 'red'
170 }
171 },
172 '5' => {
173 '1' => {
174 'May Day' => 'red'
175 },
176 '29' => {
177 'Spring Bank Holiday' => 'red'
178 }
179 },
180 '8' => {
181 '28' => {
182 'Summer Bank Holiday' => 'red'
183 }
184 }
185 );
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187 Explenation
188 This is a very simple example. It first creates a $Holidays
189 Date::HolidayParser object, then tells it to get the holidays for the
190 year 2006 ($Holidays->get(2006);) and saves the information to
191 $Holidays_2006. Then it tells Data::Dumper to dump a visual (perl-
192 usable) representation of the hash to stdout.
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195 $Date::HolidayParser::BeSilent
196 This variable is deprecated, it is the same as setting the silent
197 attribute. It will be removed in a future version.
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200 No longer supports the legacy function-oriented syntax.
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203 Eskild Hustvedt - "<zerodogg@cpan.org>"
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206 Please report any bugs or feature requests to
207 "bug-date-holidayparser@rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
208 <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Date-HolidayParser>. I
209 will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress
210 on your bug as I make changes.
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213 Copyright (C) 2006, 2007, 2010 Eskild Hustvedt, all rights reserved.
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215 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
216 under the same terms as Perl itself. There is NO warranty; not even for
217 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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221perl v5.30.0 2019-07-26 Date::HolidayParser(3)