NAME
Data::FormValidator::Constraints::Dates - Validate Dates and Times
SYNOPSIS
use Data::FormValidator::Constraints::Dates qw(date_and_time);
# In a DFV profile...
constraint_methods => {
    # 'pp' denotes AM|PM for 12 hour representation
    my_time_field => date_and_time('MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:ss pp'),
}
DESCRIPTION
date_and_time
Note: This is a new module is a new addition to Data::FormValidator and is should be considered "Beta".
This constraint creates a regular expression based on the format string passed in to validate your date against. It understands the following symbols:
Y   year  (numeric)
M   month (numeric)
D   day   (numeric)
h   hour
m   minute
s   second
p   AM|PM
Other parts of the string become part of the regular expression, so you can do perlish things like this to create more complex expressions:
'MM?/DD?/YYYY|YYYY-MM?-DD?'
Internally Date::Calc is used to test the functions.
BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY
This older, more awkward interface is supported:
# In a Data::FormValidator Profile:
validator_packages => [qw(Data::FormValidator::Constraints::Dates)],
constraints => {
    date_and_time_field       => {
        constraint_method => 'date_and_time',
        params=>[\'MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:ss pp'], # 'pp' denotes AM|PM for 12 hour representation
    },
}
SEE ALSO
- o
 - o
 - 
Data::FormValidator::Constraints::DateTime - This alternative features returning dates as DateTime objects and validating against the date formats required for the MySQL and PostgreSQL databases.
 
AUTHOR
Mark Stosberg, <mark@summersault.com>
Featuring clever code by Jan Krynicky.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2003-2005 by Mark Stosberg
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.