1Date::Manip::Examples(3U)ser Contributed Perl DocumentatiDoante::Manip::Examples(3)
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6 Date::Manip::Examples - examples of how to use Date::Manip
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9 This document includes a number of examples on how to do common
10 Date::Manip operations. I will be happy to add new examples over time,
11 and welcome suggestions and examples to include.
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13 In most cases, an example will include two different ways of getting
14 the answer. The first way will be using the new (as of 6.00) OO
15 modules. The second will be using the old-style functional interface.
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17 It should be noted that any time you want to work with alternate time
18 zones, the OO interface is STRONGLY recommended since the functional
19 interface does not preserve time zone information with the date, and
20 may therefore give incorrect results in some cases. However, working in
21 the time zone of the system should give correct results.
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23 It should be noted that, in the examples below, it appears that the OO
24 method often requires more lines of code than the functional interface.
25 There are a number of ways to shorten the OO method, but for the
26 examples, I wanted to include all the steps explicitly.
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29 Dates can be parsed in practically any form in common usage:
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31 OO method
32 $date = new Date::Manip::Date;
33 $err = $date->parse("today");
34 $err = $date->parse("1st Thursday in June 1992");
35 $err = $date->parse("05/10/93");
36 $err = $date->parse("12:30 Dec 12th 1880");
37 $err = $date->parse("8:00pm December tenth");
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39 Functional
40 $date = ParseDate("today");
41 $date = ParseDate("1st Thursday in June 1992");
42 $date = ParseDate("05/10/93");
43 $date = ParseDate("12:30 Dec 12th 1880");
44 $date = ParseDate("8:00pm December tenth");
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46 The Date::Manip::Date manual has a list of all valid formats.
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49 Amounts of time (referred to as deltas) can also be parsed:
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51 OO method
52 $delta = new Date::Manip::Delta;
53 $err = $delta->parse("in 12 hours");
54 $err = $delta->parse("-1:30:0");
55 $err = $delta->parse("4 business days later");
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57 Functional
58 $delta = ParseDateDelta("in 12 hours");
59 $delta = ParseDateDelta("-1:30:0");
60 $delta = ParseDateDelta("4 business days later");
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63 $datestr1 = "Jan 30 1999 13:00 EST";
64 $datestr2 = "2/Mar/1999 15:30:00 +0500";
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66 OO method
67 $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date;
68 $date2 = $date1->new_date();
69 $err = $date1->parse($datestr1);
70 $err = $date2->parse($datestr2);
71
72 To get an exact amount of time between the two dates (expressed
73 only in terms of hours, minutes, seconds), use:
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75 $delta = $date1->calc($date2);
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77 To get an approximate amount of time (expressed in terms of years,
78 months, weeks, etc. in terms that a human would typically think
79 of), use:
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81 $delta = $date1->calc($date2,"approx");
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83 Functional
84 $date1 = ParseDate($string1);
85 $date2 = ParseDate($string2);
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87 To get an exact amount:
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89 $delta = DateCalc($date1,$date2);
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91 and the approximate amount:
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93 $delta = DateCalc($date1,$date2,1);
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95 The Date::Manip::Calc manual has information about these, and other
96 types of calculations.
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99 To find a second date a given amount of time before or after a first
100 date, use the following:
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102 $datestr = "Jan 30 1999 13:00 EST";
103 $deltastr = "12 hours ago";
104 $deltastr = "in 3 business days";
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106 OO method
107 $date = new Date::Manip::Date;
108 $delta = $date->new_delta();
109 $date->parse($datestr);
110 $delta->parse($deltastr);
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112 $d = $date->calc($delta);
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114 Functional
115 $date = DateCalc($datestr,$deltastr);
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117 If the delta is a business delta, it will do a business mode
118 calculation.
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120 The Date::Manip::Calc manual has information about these, and other
121 types of calculations.
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124 To take two different dates and see which is earlier, do the following:
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126 $datestr1 = "Jan 30 1999 13:00 EST";
127 $datestr2 = "2/Mar/1999 15:30:00 +0500";
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129 OO method
130 $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date;
131 $date2 = $date1->new_date;
132 $date1->parse($datestr1);
133 $date2->parse($datestr2);
134
135 $date1->cmp($date2);
136 => -1, 0, 1
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138 Functional
139 $date1 = ParseDate($datestr1);
140 $date2 = ParseDate($datestr2);
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142 Date_Cmp($date1,$date2);
143 => -1, 0, 1
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146 If you have a date or a delta, you can extract information about them
147 as follows:
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149 $datestr = "1:24:08 PM EST Feb 3, 1996";
150 $deltastr = "12 hours ago";
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152 OO method
153 $date = new Date::Manip::Date;
154 $delta = $date->new_delta();
155 $date->parse($datestr);
156 $delta->parse($deltastr);
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158 $str = $date->printf("It is now %T on %b %e, %Y.");
159 => "It is now 13:24:08 on Feb 3, 1996."
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161 $str = $delta->printf("In %hv hours, %mv minutes, %sv seconds");
162 => "In -12 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds";
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164 Functional
165 $str = UnixDate($datestr,"It is now %T on %b %e, %Y.");
166 => "It is now 13:24:08 on Feb 3, 1996."
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168 $str = Delta_Format($deltastr,"In %hv hours, %mv minutes, %sv seconds");
169 => "In -12 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds";
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171 The Date::Manip::Date manual contains all of the format codes that can
172 be used to extract information from a date. The Date::Manip::Delta
173 manual contains the codes for a delta.
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176 Date::Manip can easily be used to work with the number of seconds since
177 the epoch (Jan 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC).
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179 If you have a date, and you want to find out how many seconds it is
180 after the epoch, you can do it in the following ways:
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182 $datestr = "1999-04-30-15:30:00 EDT";
183 $secs = 1234567;
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185 OO method
186 To find out how many seconds have elapsed on a certain date, you
187 can do the following:
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189 $date = new Date::Manip::Date;
190 $err = $date->parse($datestr);
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192 $str = $date->printf('%s');
193 => number of seconds
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195 To find out the date that is a certain number of seconds since the
196 epoch, you can use the following:
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198 $date = new Date::Manip::Date;
199 $err = $date->parse("epoch $secs");
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201 $date now contains the date wanted (in the local time zone)
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203 Functional
204 To find out how many seconds have elapsed:
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206 $str = UnixDate($datestr,'%s');
207 => number of seconds
208
209 To find the date that is a number of seconds since the epoch:
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211 $date = ParseDateString("epoch $secs");
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213 Note that Date::Manip will work with both positive seconds (for dates
214 that have come since the epoch) and negative seconds (for dates that
215 occurred before the epoch).
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218 To find a list of dates where a recurring event happens (even very
219 complex recurrences), do the following:
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221 OO method
222 # To find the 2nd Tuesday of every month from Jan 1 1999 to Apr 30 1999
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224 $recur = new Date::Manip::Recur;
225 $start = $recur->new_date();
226 $end = $recur->new_date();
227 $start->parse("Jan 1 1999");
228 $end->parse("Apr 30 1999");
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230 $recur->parse("0:1*2:2:0:0:0",$start,$end);
231 @date = $recur->dates();
232
233 # To find the Monday after Easter in 1997-1999
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235 $recur = new Date::Manip::Recur;
236 $recur->parse("*1997-1999:0:0:0:0:0:0*EASTER,ND1");
237 @date = $recur->dates();
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239 Functional
240 # To find the 2nd Tuesday of every month from Jan 1 1999 to Apr 30 1999
241 @date = ParseRecur("0:1*2:2:0:0:0","","Jan 1 1999","Apr 30 1999");
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243 # To find the Monday after Easter in 1997-1999.
244 @date = ParseRecur("*1997-1999:0:0:0:0:0:0*EASTER,ND1");
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246 The Date::Manip::Recur manual contains information about recurring
247 events.
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250 If you want to work with dates in a language other than English (but
251 you are only working with a single language), do the following:
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253 OO method
254 $date = new Date::Manip::Date;
255 $date->config("Language","French","DateFormat","non-US");
256 $date->parse("1er decembre 1990");
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258 Functional
259 Date_Init("Language=French","DateFormat=non-US");
260 $date = ParseDate("1er decembre 1990");
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262 The Date::Manip::Config manual has a list of all supported languages
263 (in the section on the Language config variable). The meaning of the
264 DateFormat config variable is also included.
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267 If you want to work with dates in two (or more) languages, it is
268 STRONGLY recommended that you use the OO interface. The functional
269 interface will be much slower since it has to re-initialize a lot of
270 language-specific stuff every time you switch back and forth between
271 languages.
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273 OO method
274 $date_eng = new Date::Manip::Date;
275 $date_eng->config("Language","English","DateFormat","US");
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277 $date_fre = new Date::Manip::Date;
278 $date_fre->config("Language","French","DateFormat","non-US");
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280 Use the $date_eng object to do English operations, the $date_fre
281 object to do French operations.
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283 Functional
284 If you are working with both French and English dates, you can call
285 the following to switch between them:
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287 Date_Init("Language=French","DateFormat=non-US");
288 Date_Init("Language=English","DateFormat=US");
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290 This is NOT recommended. Use the OO method instead.
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293 Please refer to the Date::Manip::Problems documentation for information
294 on submitting bug reports or questions to the author.
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297 Date::Manip - main module documentation
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300 This script is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
301 under the same terms as Perl itself.
302
304 Sullivan Beck (sbeck@cpan.org)
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308perl v5.36.0 2022-12-10 Date::Manip::Examples(3)