1Business::Hours(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Business::Hours(3)
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6 Business::Hours - Calculate business hours in a time period
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9 use Business::Hours;
10 my $hours = Business::Hours->new();
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12 # Get a Set::IntSpan of all the business hours in the next week.
13 # use the default business hours of 9am to 6pm localtime.
14 $hours->for_timespan( Start => time(), End => time()+(86400*7) );
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17 This module is a simple tool for calculating business hours in a time
18 period. Over time, additional functionality will be added to make it
19 easy to calculate the number of business hours between arbitrary dates.
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22 new
23 Creates a new Business::Hours object. Takes no arguments.
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25 business_hours HASH
26 Gets / sets the business hours for this object. Takes a hash (NOT a
27 hash reference) of the form:
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29 my %hours = (
30 0 => { Name => 'Sunday',
31 Start => 'HH:MM',
32 End => 'HH:MM' },
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34 1 => { Name => 'Monday',
35 Start => 'HH:MM',
36 End => 'HH:MM' },
37 ....
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39 6 => { Name => 'Saturday',
40 Start => 'HH:MM',
41 End => 'HH:MM' },
42 );
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44 Start and End times are of the form HH:MM. Valid times are from 00:00
45 to 23:59. If your hours are from 9am to 6pm, use Start => '9:00', End
46 => '18:00'. A given day MUST have a start and end time OR may declare
47 both Start and End to be undef, if there are no valid hours on that
48 day.
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50 You can use the array Breaks to mark interruptions between Start/End
51 (for instance lunch hour). It's an array of periods, each with a Start
52 and End time:
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54 my %hours = (
55 0 => { Name => 'Sunday',
56 Start => 'HH:MM',
57 End => 'HH:MM',
58 Breaks => [
59 { Start => 'HH:MM',
60 End => 'HH:MM' },
61 { Start => 'HH:MM',
62 End => 'HH:MM' },
63 ],
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65 1 => { Name => 'Monday',
66 Start => 'HH:MM',
67 End => 'HH:MM' },
68 ....
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70 6 => { Name => 'Saturday',
71 Start => 'HH:MM',
72 End => 'HH:MM' },
73 );
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75 Note that the ending time is really "what is the first minute we're
76 closed. If you specifiy an "End" of 18:00, that means that at 6pm, you
77 are closed. The last business second was 17:59:59.
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79 As well, you can pass information about holidays using key 'holidays'
80 and an array reference value, for example:
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82 $hours->business_hours(
83 0 => { Name => 'Sunday',
84 Start => 'HH:MM',
85 End => 'HH:MM' },
86 ....
87 6 => { Name => 'Saturday',
88 Start => 'HH:MM',
89 End => 'HH:MM' },
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91 holidays => [qw(01-01 12-25 2009-05-08)],
92 );
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94 Read more about holidays specification below in holidays.
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96 preprocess_business_hours
97 Checks and transforms business hours data. No need to call it.
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99 holidays ARRAY
100 Gets / sets holidays for this object. Takes an array where each element
101 is ether 'MM-DD' or 'YYYY-MM-DD'.
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103 Specification with year defined may be required when a holiday matches
104 Sunday or Saturday. In many countries days are shifted in such case.
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106 Holidays can be set via business_hours method as well, so you can use
107 this feature without changing your code.
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109 for_timespan HASH
110 Takes a hash with the following parameters:
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112 Start
113 The start of the period in question in seconds since the epoch
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115 End The end of the period in question in seconds since the epoch
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117 Returns a Set::IntSpan of business hours for this period of time.
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119 between START, END
120 Returns the number of business seconds between START and END Both START
121 and END should be specified in seconds since the epoch.
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123 Returns -1 if START or END are outside the calculated business hours.
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125 first_after START
126 Returns START if START is within business hours. Otherwise, returns
127 the next business second after START. START should be specified in
128 seconds since the epoch.
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130 Returns -1 if it can't find any business hours within thirty days.
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132 add_seconds START, SECONDS
133 Returns a time SECONDS business seconds after START. START should be
134 specified in seconds since the epoch.
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136 Returns -1 if it can't find any business hours within thirty days.
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139 Yes, most likely. Please report them to
140 bug-business-hours@rt.cpan.org.
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143 Jesse Vincent, jesse@cpan.org
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146 Copyright 2003-2008 Best Practical Solutions, LLC.
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148 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
149 under the same terms as Perl itself.
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151 The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included
152 with this module.
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156perl v5.30.1 2020-01-29 Business::Hours(3)