=head1 NAME
Date::Calc::Object - Object-oriented add-on
for
Date::Calc
with
overloaded operators
=head1 MOTTO
Make frequent things easy and infrequent or hard things possible
=head1 PREFACE
Note that you
do
B<NOT> need to
"C<use Date::Calc qw(...);>"
in
addition to this module.
Simply
B<INSTEAD OF>
with
the same
"C<qw(...)>"
as you would
with
the
"Date::Calc"
module, and then forget about
"Date::Calc::Object"
altogether.
The rest of your existing code doesn't change at all.
Note also that in order to create a new date object, you
do
not
need to
use
$date_object
= Date::Calc::Object->new(...);
(but you may), and should
use
$date_object
= Date::Calc->new(...);
instead (saves you some typing and is a trifle faster).
=head1 SYNOPSIS
=head2 Export tags
:all - all functions from Date::Calc
:aux - auxiliary functions shift_*
:ALL - both :all and :aux
=head2 Functions
See L<Date::Calc(3)>
for
a list of available functions.
$year
= shift_year(\
@_
);
(
$year
,
$mm
,
$dd
) = shift_date(\
@_
);
(
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
) = shift_time(\
@_
);
(
$year
,
$mm
,
$dd
,
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
) = shift_datetime(\
@_
);
=head2 Methods
$old
= Date::Calc->accurate_mode([FLAG]);
$old
= Date::Calc->normalized_mode([FLAG]);
$old
= Date::Calc->number_format([NUMBER|CODEREF]);
$old
= Date::Calc->delta_format([NUMBER|CODEREF]);
$old
= Date::Calc->date_format([NUMBER|CODEREF]);
$old
= Date::Calc->language([LANGUAGE]);
$old
=
$date
->accurate_mode([FLAG]);
$old
=
$date
->normalized_mode([FLAG]);
$old
=
$date
->number_format([NUMBER|CODEREF]);
$old
=
$date
->delta_format([NUMBER|CODEREF]);
$old
=
$date
->date_format([NUMBER|CODEREF]);
$old
=
$date
->language([LANGUAGE]);
$flag
=
$date
->is_delta();
$flag
=
$date
->is_date();
$flag
=
$date
->is_short();
$flag
=
$date
->is_long();
$flag
=
$date
->is_valid();
$date
= Date::Calc->new([TYPE]);
$date
= Date::Calc->new([TYPE,]YEAR,MONTH,DAY[,HRS,MIN,SEC]);
$date
= Date::Calc->new(
$arrayref
);
$newdate
=
$somedate
->new([TYPE]);
$newdate
=
$somedate
->new([TYPE,]YEAR,MONTH,DAY[,HRS,MIN,SEC]);
$newdate
=
$somedate
->new(
$arrayref
);
$datecopy
=
$date
->clone();
$targetdate
->copy(
$sourcedate
);
$targetdate
->copy(
$arrayref
);
$targetdate
->copy(
@list
);
(
$year
,
$month
,
$day
) =
$date
->date([TYPE]);
(
$year
,
$month
,
$day
) =
$date
->date([TYPE,]YEAR,MONTH,DAY[,HRS,MIN,SEC]);
(
$year
,
$month
,
$day
) =
$date
->date(
$arrayref
);
([
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
]) =
$date
->
time
([TYPE]);
(
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
) =
$date
->
time
([TYPE,]HRS,MIN,SEC);
([
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
]) =
$date
->
time
(
$arrayref
);
(
$year
,
$month
,
$day
,
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
) =
$date
->datetime([TYPE]);
(
$year
,
$month
,
$day
,
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
) =
$date
->datetime([TYPE,]YEAR,MONTH,DAY[,HRS,MIN,SEC]);
$date
= Date::Calc->today([FLAG]);
$date
= Date::Calc->now([FLAG]);
$date
= Date::Calc->today_and_now([FLAG]);
$date
= Date::Calc->
gmtime
([
time
]);
$date
= Date::Calc->
localtime
([
time
]);
$delta
= Date::Calc->tzoffset([
time
]);
$date
= Date::Calc->time2date([
time
]);
$date
->today([FLAG]);
$date
->now([FLAG]);
$date
->today_and_now([FLAG]);
$date
->
gmtime
([
time
]);
$date
->
localtime
([
time
]);
$delta
->tzoffset([
time
]);
$date
->time2date([
time
]);
$time
= Date::Calc->mktime();
$time
= Date::Calc->date2time();
$time
=
$date
->mktime();
$time
=
$date
->date2time();
$year
=
$date
->year([YEAR]);
$month
=
$date
->month([MONTH]);
$day
=
$date
->day([DAY]);
$hours
=
$date
->hours([HRS]);
$minutes
=
$date
->minutes([MIN]);
$seconds
=
$date
->seconds([SEC]);
$number
=
$date
->number([NUMBER|CODEREF]);
$string
=
$date
->string([NUMBER|CODEREF][,LANGUAGE]);
$delta
->normalize();
=head2 Overloaded Operators
=head2 Comparison Operators:
if
(
$date1
<
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
<=
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
>
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
>=
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
==
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
!=
$date2
) {
$comp
=
$date1
<=>
$date2
;
if
(
$date1
lt
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
le
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
gt
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
ge
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
eq
$date2
) {
if
(
$date1
ne
$date2
) {
$comp
=
$date1
cmp
$date2
;
Note that you can of course also compare two deltas,
but not a date and a delta!
if
([2000,4,1] ==
$date
) {
if
(
$today
> [2000,4,1]) {
if
(
$now
ge [2000,3,26,2,0,0]) {
if
(
$delta
== [18,0,0]) {
if
(
$delta
== -1) {
=head2 Plus:
$date2
=
$date1
+
$delta
;
$date2
=
$delta
+
$date1
;
$date
+=
$delta
;
$this
=
$date
++;
$next
= ++
$date
;
$delta3
=
$delta1
+
$delta2
;
$delta1
+=
$delta2
;
$delta
+=
$date
;
$delta
++;
++
$delta
;
$date2
= [2000,3,26] +
$delta
;
$date2
=
$date1
+ [+1,0,0];
$date2
= [0,0,-1] +
$date1
;
$date2
=
$date1
+ 1;
$date
+= [0,0,+1];
$date
+= 2;
$delta3
= [1,+1,0,-1] +
$delta2
;
$delta3
=
$delta1
+ [1,0,0,+1];
$delta3
=
$delta1
+ 1;
$delta
+= [1,0,+1,0];
$delta
+= [2000,3,26];
$delta
+= 7;
=head2 Unary Minus:
$delta2
= -
$delta1
;
=head2 Minus:
$delta
=
$date2
-
$date1
;
$date2
=
$date1
-
$delta
;
$date
-=
$delta
;
$date2
-=
$date1
;
$this
=
$date
--;
$prev
= --
$date
;
$delta3
=
$delta2
-
$delta1
;
$delta2
-=
$delta1
;
$delta
--;
--
$delta
;
$delta
=
$today
- [2000,3,26];
$delta
= [2000,4,1] -
$date
;
$date2
= [2000,3,26] -
$delta
;
$date2
=
$date1
- [1,0,0,+7];
$date2
=
$date1
- 7;
$date
-= [1,0,0,+1];
$date2
-= [2000,3,26];
$date2
-= 1;
$delta3
= [1,0,+1,0] -
$delta1
;
$delta3
=
$delta2
- [1,0,0,-1];
$delta
-= [1,0,0,+1];
$delta
-= 7;
=head2 Miscellaneous Operators:
$string
=
"$date"
;
$string
=
"$delta"
;
print
"$date\n"
;
print
"$delta\n"
;
if
(
$date
) {
if
(
$delta
) {
$days
=
abs
(
$date
);
$diff
=
abs
(
$delta
);
$diff
=
abs
(
abs
(
$delta
));
=head1 DESCRIPTION
=over 2
=item *
FLAG
"FLAG"
is either 0 (
for
"false"
) or 1 (
for
"true"
).
In the case of
"C<accurate_mode()>"
and
"C<normalized_mode()>"
,
this switches the corresponding mode on and off (see further
below
for
an explanation of what these are).
In the case of
"C<today()>"
,
"C<now()>"
and
"C<today_and_now()>"
,
a
"true"
value indicates
"GMT"
(Greenwich Mean Time), as opposed
to
local
time
, which is the
default
.
=item *
NUMBER
"NUMBER"
is a number between 0 and 2 (
for
"number_format()"
and
"number()"
)
or between 0 and 4 (
for
"delta_format()"
,
"date_format()"
and
"string()"
),
indicating which of the three/five predefined formats, respectively,
should be used
for
converting a date into numeric representation
(needed
for
comparing dates,
for
instance) or string representation.
Format
should be fastest to calculate, too).
The string representation of dates in
format
being sortable in chronological order (and of complying
with
S<ISO 8601>).
(The numeric formats are (trivially) always sortable in chronological
order of course.)
The other formats are (mostly) increasingly more sophisticated (in terms of
esthetics and computation
time
)
with
increasing number (except
for
format
Delta number formats (short):
0 13603
1 13603
2 13603
Delta string formats (short):
0
'+0+0+13603'
1
'+0 +0 +13603'
2
'+0Y +0M +13603D'
3
'+0 Y +0 M +13603 D'
4
'(0,0,13603)'
Date number formats (short):
0 20010401
1 730576
2 730576
Date string formats (short):
0
'20010401'
1
'01-Apr-2001'
2
'Sun 1-Apr-2001'
3
'Sunday, April 1st 2001'
4
'[2001,4,1]'
Delta number formats (long):
0 13603.012959
1 13603.012959
2 13603.0624884259
Delta string formats (long):
0
'+0+0+13603+1+29+59'
1
'+0 +0 +13603 +1 +29 +59'
2
'+0Y +0M +13603D +1h +29m +59s'
3
'+0 Y +0 M +13603 D +1 h +29 m +59 s'
4
'(0,0,13603,1,29,59)'
Date number formats (long):
0 20010401.082959
1 730576.082959
2 730576.354155093
Date string formats (long):
0
'20010401082959'
1
'01-Apr-2001 08:29:59'
2
'Sun 1-Apr-2001 08:29:59'
3
'Sunday, April 1st 2001 08:29:59'
4
'[2001,4,1,8,29,59]'
If a number outside of the permitted range is specified, or
if
the value
is not a code reference (see also the
next
section below
for
more details),
the
default
format
=item *
CODEREF
"CODEREF"
is the reference of a subroutine which can be passed to the
methods
"number_format()"
,
"delta_format()"
and
"date_format()"
in order
to install a callback function which will be called subsequently whenever
a date (or delta) object needs to be (implicitly) converted into a number
or string.
This happens
for
instance
when
you compare two date objects, or
when
you
put a date object reference in a string between double quotes.
Such a
"CODEREF"
can also be passed to the methods
"number()"
and
"string()"
for
explicitly converting a date object as desired.
=item *
LANGUAGE
"LANGUAGE"
is either a number in the range C<[1..Languages()]>,
or one of the strings
"C<Language_to_Text(1..Languages())>"
(see also L<Date::Calc(3)>).
=item *
TYPE
"TYPE"
is 0
for
a regular date and 1
for
a delta vector (a list of
year, month, day and optionally hours, minutes and seconds offsets).
=item *
Storage
"Date::Calc"
objects are implemented as two nested arrays.
The
"blessed"
array (whose reference is the object reference
you receive
when
calling the
"new()"
method) contains an
anonymous array at position zero and the object's data in
its remaining fields.
The embedded anonymous array is used
for
storing the object's
attributes (flags).
Dates and delta vectors always comprise either 3 or 6 data
values
:
Year, month, day plus (optionally) hours, minutes and seconds.
These
values
are stored in the
"blessed"
array at positions 1..3
or 1..6, respectively.
An object without the
time
values
is therefore called
"short"
,
and an object having
time
values
is called
"long"
throughout
this manual.
Hint: Whenever possible,
if
you
do
not need the
time
values
, omit
them, i.e., always
use
the
"short"
form of the object
if
possible,
this will speed up calculations a little (the short form uses
different (faster) functions
for
all calculations internally).
The embedded anonymous array contains various flags:
At position zero, it contains the
"TYPE"
indicator which determines
whether the object is a date or a delta vector.
At position 1, the object stores the
"NUMBER"
of one of the delta
vector formats, or the reference of a callback function which converts
the contents of the object into string representation
if
it's a delta
vector, or
"undef"
if
the global settings apply.
At position 2, the object stores the
"NUMBER"
of one of the date formats,
or the reference of a callback function which converts the contents of
the object into string representation
if
it's a date, or
"undef"
if
the
global settings apply.
At position 3, the object stores the
"LANGUAGE"
to be used
for
all
conversions into strings (where applicable), or
"undef"
if
the global
language setting applies.
Note that your callback functions (see the section
"Callback Functions"
further below
for
more details) should not pay attention to this value
at position 3, because they get a parameter which tells them which
language to
use
(this is necessary in order to allow temporary overrides).
If your callback handlers
use
the
"*_to_Text*"
functions (or any
other language-dependent function) from the
"Date::Calc"
module,
your handlers should pass on this language parameter to these
functions (and not the value from position 3).
Be reminded though that you should B<NEVER> access the object's
internal data directly, i.e., through their positional numbers,
but B<ALWAYS> through their respective accessor methods, e.g.:
year()
month()
day()
hours()
minutes()
seconds()
date()
time
()
datetime()
is_delta()
is_date()
is_short()
is_long()
delta_format()
date_format()
language()
And although position 4 and onward in the embedded anonymous array is
currently unused, it might not stay so in future releases of this module.
Therefore, in case you need more attributes in a subclass of the
"Date::Calc[::Object]"
class, I suggest using
values
starting at
positions a bit further up, e.g. 6, 8 or 10.
=item *
Invalid Dates
Only
"new()"
allows to create objects containing possibly invalid
dates (needed
for
reading in and evaluating user input,
for
example).
=item *
Usage
The methods
accurate_mode()
normalized_mode()
number_format()
delta_format()
date_format()
language()
date()
time
()
datetime()
year()
month()
day()
hours()
minutes()
seconds()
are used
for
reading as well as
for
setting attributes. They simply
return
the
values
in question
if
they are called without parameters.
The methods
accurate_mode()
normalized_mode()
number_format()
delta_format()
date_format()
language()
always
return
the previous value
if
a new value is set. This allows
you to change these
values
temporarily and to restore their old value
afterwards more easily (but you can also
override
the
"format"
and
"language"
settings directly
when
calling the
"number()"
or
"string()"
method).
The methods
date()
time
()
datetime()
year()
month()
day()
hours()
minutes()
seconds()
always
return
the new
values
when
the corresponding
values
have
been changed.
The method
"date()"
NEVER returns the
time
values
(hours, minutes,
seconds) even
if
they have just been set using this method (which
the method optionally allows). Otherwise it would be very hard to
predict the exact number of
values
it returns, which might lead
to errors (wrong number of parameters) elsewhere in your program.
The method
"datetime()"
ALWAYS returns the
time
values
(hours,
minutes, seconds) even
if
the object in question lacks a
time
part. In that case, zeros are returned
for
hours, minutes and
seconds instead (but the stored
time
part is left unchanged,
whether it
exists
or not).
If you
do
not provide
values
for
hours, minutes and seconds
when
using the method
"date()"
to set the
values
for
year, month and
day, the
time
part will not be changed (whether it
exists
or not).
If you
do
not provide
values
for
hours, minutes and seconds
when
using the method
"datetime()"
to set the
values
for
year, month
and day, the
time
part will be filled
with
zeros (the
time
part
will be created
if
necessary).
If the object is short, i.e.,
if
it does not have any
time
values
,
the method
"time()"
returns an empty list.
If the object is short and the methods
"hours()"
,
"minutes()"
or
"seconds()"
are used to set any of these
time
values
, the object
is automatically promoted to the
"long"
form, and the other two
time
values
are filled
with
zeros.
The following methods can also
return
"undef"
under certain
circumstances:
delta_format()
date_format()
language()
is_delta()
is_date()
is_short()
is_long()
is_valid()
hours()
minutes()
seconds()
number()
string()
The methods
"delta_format()"
,
"date_format()"
and
"language()"
return
"undef"
when
they are called as object methods and
no
individual
override
has
been
defined
for
the object in question.
The
"is_*()"
predicate methods
return
"undef"
if
the object in
question does not have the expected internal structure. This can
happen
for
instance
when
you create an empty object
with
"new()"
.
When called without parameters, the methods
"hours()"
,
"minutes()"
and
"seconds()"
return
"undef"
if
the object in question does not
have a
time
part.
The methods
"number()"
and
"string()"
return
"undef"
if
the object
in question is not valid (i.e.,
if
"is_valid()"
returns
"undef"
or
false).
And
finally
, the methods
copy()
today()
now()
today_and_now()
gmtime
()
localtime
()
tzoffset()
time2date()
normalize()
return
the object reference of the (target) object in question
for
convenience.
=item *
Import/Export
Note that you can
import
and export Unix
"time"
values
using the
methods
"gmtime()"
,
"localtime()"
,
"mktime()"
,
"date2time()"
and
"time2date()"
, both as
local
time
or as UTC/GMT.
=item *
Accurate Mode and Normalized Mode
The method
"accurate_mode()"
controls the internal flag which
determines which of two fundamental modes of operation is used.
When set to true (the
default
at startup), delta vectors are
calculated to give the exact difference in days between two
dates. The
"year"
and
"month"
entries in the resulting delta
vector are always zero in that case.
If
"accurate mode"
is switched off (
when
the corresponding
flag is set to false), delta vectors are calculated
with
year and month differences.
E.g., the difference between C<[1999,12,6]> and C<[2000,6,24]>
is C<[+0 +0 +201]> (plus 201 days) in accurate mode and
C<[+1 -6 +18]> (plus one year, minus 6 months, plus 18 days)
when
accurate mode is switched off, and is C<[+0 +6 +18]>
(plus 6 months, plus 18 days)
if
additionally, "normalized
mode" is switched on.
The delta vector is calculated by simply taking the difference
in years, the difference in months and the difference in days
(
if
"accurate mode"
is switched off and
if
"normalized mode"
has
not been switched on). This is called
"one-by-one"
semantics
or
"year-month-day mode"
;
"YMD mode"
for
short.
When
"normalized mode"
is switched on (
while
"accurate mode"
is switched off), the delta vector is calculated in a more
complex way involving the functions
"C<Add_Delta_YM()>"
(
for
"truncation"
) and
"C<Delta_Days()>"
.
Moreover, the result is normalized, i.e., the
return
values
are guaranteed to all have the same sign (or to be zero),
and to all be
"minimal"
, i.e., not to exceed the ranges
C<[-11..+11]>
for
months, C<[-30..+30]>
for
days, C<[-23..+23]>
for
hours and C<[-59..+59]>
for
minutes and seconds.
The rule is to add these result
values
to a date in a
left-to-right order, and to
truncate
invalid intermediate
dates, such as e.g. C<[2009,2,29]>, to the
last
valid day
of that same month, e.g. C<[2009,2,28]>. This is called
"left-to-right with truncation"
semantics or "normalized
mode
"; "
N_YMD mode"
for
short.
The method
"normalized_mode()"
controls the internal flag which
determines whether
"YMD mode"
is used (the
default
at startup,
for
reasons of backward compatibility) or
"N_YMD mode"
.
Note that also
for
reasons of backward compatibility, this
flag only
has
effect
when
"accurate mode"
is switched off.
Both flags can be set and
reset
independently from
each
other,
however.
Therefore, at startup, you can
for
instance switch "normalized
mode" on, without having any immediate effect, and switch off
"accurate mode"
later, which instantly also causes "normalized
mode" to spring into effect.
Because years and months have varying lengths in terms of days,
the
"YMD"
and
"N_YMD"
modes are less accurate than
"accurate mode"
,
because these modes depend on the context of the two dates of which
the delta vector is the difference. Added to a different date, a
delta vector calculated in
"YMD mode"
or
"N_YMD mode"
may yield
a different offset in terms of days, i.e., the final result may
sometimes vary seemingly unpredictably (or in other situations
may give you the expected result, at the expense of actually
representing a varying difference in days, determined exclusively
by context).
Beware also that -
for
the same reason - the absolute value
(
"C<abs()>"
) of a delta vector returns a fictitious number
of days
if
the delta vector contains non-zero
values
for
"year"
and/or
"month"
(see also the
next
section "Absolute
Value" below
for
more details).
Example:
The difference between C<[2000,1,1]> and C<[2000,3,1]> is
C<[+0 +0 +60]> in
"accurate mode"
and C<[+0 +2 +0]> in "YMD
mode
" (in this "
benign" example, the result is the same in
"YMD mode"
and in
"N_YMD mode"
).
When added to the date C<[2000,4,1]>, the
"accurate"
delta
vector yields the date C<[2000,5,31]>, whereas the
"YMD mode"
delta vector yields the date C<[2000,6,1]> (which is actually
a difference of 61 days).
Moreover,
when
added to the date C<[1999,1,1]>, the
"accurate"
delta vector yields the date C<[1999,3,2]>, whereas the
"inaccurate"
"YMD Mode"
delta vector yields the date C<[1999,3,1]> (which is
actually a difference of 59 days).
Depending on what you want, either mode may suit you better.
=item *
Absolute Value
Note that
"C<abs($date)>"
and
"C<abs($delta)>"
are just shorthands
for
"C<$date-E<gt>number()>"
and
"C<$delta-E<gt>number()>"
.
The operator
"C<abs()>"
,
when
applied to a date or delta vector,
returns the corresponding number of days (see below
for
an exception
to this),
with
the
time
part (
if
available) represented by a fraction
after
the decimal point.
In the case of dates, the absolute value (to the left of the
decimal point) is the number of days since the 1st of January
S<1 A.D.> (by extrapolating the Gregorian calendar back beyond
its
"natural"
limit of 1582 A.D.) B<PLUS ONE>.
(I.e., the absolute value of the 1st of January 1 A.D. is 1.)
Exception:
If the
"NUMBER"
or
"number_format()"
is set to 0 (the
default
setting), the absolute value of a date to the left of the decimal
point is
"yyyymmdd"
, i.e., the number in which the uppermost four
digits correspond to the year, the
next
lower two digits to the
month and the lowermost two digits to the day.
In the case of delta vectors, the absolute value (to the left
of the decimal point) is simply the difference in days (but
see also below).
Note that the absolute value of a delta vector can be negative!
If you want a positive value in all cases, apply the
"C<abs()>"
operator again, i.e.,
"C<$posdiff = abs(abs($delta));>"
.
If the delta vector contains non-zero
values
for
"year"
and/or
"month"
(see also the discussion of
"Accurate Mode"
in the section
above), an exact representation in days cannot be calculated,
because years and months
do
not have fixed equivalents in days.
If nevertheless you attempt to calculate the absolute value of
such a delta vector, a fictitious value is returned, which is
calculated by simply multiplying the year difference
with
12,
adding the month difference, multiplying this sum
with
31 and
finally
adding the day difference.
Beware that because of this, the absolute
values
of delta
vectors are not necessarily contiguous.
Moreover, since there is more than one way to express the
difference between two dates, comparisons of delta vectors
may not always yield the expected result.
Example:
The difference between the two dates C<[2000,4,30]> and
C<[2001,5,1]> can be expressed as C<[+1 +1 -29]>, or as
C<[+1 +0 +1]>.
The first delta vector
has
an absolute value of 374,
whereas the latter delta vector
has
an absolute value
of only 373 (
while
the true difference in days between
the two dates is 366).
If the date or delta vector
has
a
time
part, the
time
is returned
as a fraction of a full day
after
the decimal point as follows:
If the
"NUMBER"
or
"number_format()"
is set to 0 (the
default
setting) or 1, this fraction is simply
".hhmmss"
, i.e., the
two digits
after
the decimal point represent the hours, the
next
two digits the minutes and the
last
two digits the seconds.
Note that you cannot simply add and subtract these
values
to
yield meaningful dates or deltas again, you can only
use
them
for
comparisons (equal, not equal, less than, greater than,
etc.). If you want to add/subtract,
read
on:
Only
when
the
"NUMBER"
or
"number_format()"
is set to 2, this
fraction will be the equivalent number of seconds (i.e.,
C<(((hours * 60) + minutes) * 60) + seconds>) divided by the
number of seconds in a full day (i.e., C<24*60*60 = 86400>),
or C<0/86400>, C<1/86400>, ... , C<86399/86400>.
In other words, the (mathematically correct) fraction of a day.
You can safely perform arithmetics
with
these
values
as far
as the internal precision of your vendor's implementation
of the C run-
time
library (on which Perl depends) will permit.
=item *
Renormalizing Delta Vectors
When adding or subtracting delta vectors to/from one another,
the addition or subtraction takes place component by component.
Example:
[+0 +0 +0 +3 +29 +50] + [+0 +0 +0 +0 +55 +5] = [+0 +0 +0 +3 +84 +55]
[+0 +0 +0 +3 +29 +50] - [+0 +0 +0 +0 +55 +5] = [+0 +0 +0 +3 -26 +45]
This may result in
time
values
outside the usual ranges (C<[-23..+23]>
for
hours and C<[-59..+59]>
for
minutes and seconds).
Note that even though the delta value
for
days will often become quite large,
it is impossible to renormalize this value because there is
no
constant
conversion factor from days to months (should it be 28, 29, 30 or 31?).
If accurate mode (see further above
for
what that is) is switched off,
delta vectors can also contain non-zero
values
for
years and months. If
you add or subtract these, the value
for
months can lie outside the
range C<[-11..11]>, which isn't wrong, but may seem funny.
Therefore, the
"normalize()"
method will also renormalize the
"months"
value,
if
and only
if
accurate mode
has
been switched off. (!)
(Hence, switch accurate mode B<ON> temporarily
if
you B<DON'T> want
the renormalization of the
"months"
value to happen.)
If you want to force the
time
values
from the example above back into
their proper ranges,
use
the
"normalize()"
method as follows:
print
"[$delta]\n"
;
$delta
->normalize();
print
"[$delta]\n"
;
This will
print
[+0 +0 +0 +3 +84 +55]
[+0 +0 +0 +4 +24 +55]
for
the first and
[+0 +0 +0 +3 -26 +45]
[+0 +0 +0 +2 +34 +45]
for
the second delta vector from the example further above.
Note that the
values
for
days, hours, minutes and seconds are
guaranteed to have the same sign
after
the renormalization.
Under
"normal"
circumstances, i.e.,
when
accurate mode is on (the
default
), this method only
has
an effect on the
time
part of the
delta vector.
If the delta vector in question does not have a
time
part,
nothing happens.
If accurate mode is off, the
"months"
value is also normalized,
i.e.,
if
it lies outside of the range C<[-11..11]>, integer
multiples of 12 are added to the
"years"
value and subtracted
from the
"months"
value. Moreover, the
"months"
value is
guaranteed to have the same sign as the
values
for
days,
hours, minutes and seconds,
unless
the
"months"
value is zero
or the
values
for
days, hours, minutes and seconds are all zero.
If the object in question is a date and
if
warnings are enabled,
the message
"normalizing a date is a no-op"
will be printed to
STDERR.
If the object in question is not a valid
"Date::Calc"
object,
nothing happens.
The method returns its object's reference, which allows chaining
of method calls, as in the following example:
@time
=
$delta
->normalize()->
time
();
=item *
Callback Functions
Note that you are not restricted to the built-in formats
(numbered from 0 to 2
for
"number_format()"
and
"number()"
and from 0 to 4
for
"delta_format()"
,
"date_format()"
and
"string()"
)
for
converting a date or delta object into a
number or string.
You can also provide your own function(s)
for
doing so, in
order to suit your own taste or needs, by passing a subroutine
reference to the appropriate method, i.e.,
"number_format()"
,
"number()"
,
"delta_format()"
,
"date_format()"
and
"string()"
.
You can pass a handler to only one or more of these methods,
or to all of them, as you like. You can
use
different callback
functions, or the same
for
all.
In order to facilitate the latter, and in order to make the
decoding of the various cases easier
for
you, the callback
function receives a uniquely identifying function code as
its second parameter:
0 = TO_NUMBER | IS_DATE | IS_SHORT (number[_format])
1 = TO_NUMBER | IS_DATE | IS_LONG (number[_format])
2 = TO_NUMBER | IS_DELTA | IS_SHORT (number[_format])
3 = TO_NUMBER | IS_DELTA | IS_LONG (number[_format])
4 = TO_STRING | IS_DATE | IS_SHORT (string|date_format)
5 = TO_STRING | IS_DATE | IS_LONG (string|date_format)
6 = TO_STRING | IS_DELTA | IS_SHORT (string|delta_format)
7 = TO_STRING | IS_DELTA | IS_LONG (string|delta_format)
The first parameter of the callback function is of course the
reference of the object in question itself (therefore, the callback
function can actually be an object method - but not a class method,
for
obvious reasons).
The third parameter is the number of the language (in the range
C<[1..Languages()]>) which you should always pass along
when
using
any of the following functions from the
"Date::Calc"
module in
your handler:
"Decode_Month()"
,
"Decode_Day_of_Week()"
,
"Compressed_to_Text()"
,
"Date_to_Text()"
,
"Date_to_Text_Long()"
,
"Calendar()"
,
"Month_to_Text()"
,
"Day_of_Week_to_Text()"
,
"Day_of_Week_Abbreviation()"
,
"Decode_Date_EU()"
,
"Decode_Date_US()"
,
"Decode_Date_EU2()"
,
"Decode_Date_US2()"
,
"Parse_Date()"
.
The callback handler should
return
the resulting number or string,
as requested.
BEWARE that you should NEVER rely upon any knowledge of the
object's internal structure, as this may be subject to change!
ALWAYS
use
the test and access methods provided by this module!
Example:
sub
handler
{
my
(
$self
,
$code
,
$lang
) =
@_
;
if
(
$code
== 0)
{
return
Date_to_Days(
$self
->date() );
}
elsif
(
$code
== 1)
{
return
Date_to_Days(
$self
->date() ) +
( (
$self
->hours() * 60 +
$self
->minutes() ) * 60 +
$self
->seconds() ) / 86400;
}
elsif
(
$code
== 2)
{
return
(
$self
->year() * 12 +
$self
->month() ) * 31 +
$self
->day();
}
elsif
(
$code
== 3)
{
return
(
$self
->year() * 12 +
$self
->month() ) * 31 +
$self
->day() +
( (
$self
->hours() * 60 +
$self
->minutes() ) * 60 +
$self
->seconds() ) / 86400;
}
elsif
(
$code
== 4)
{
return
join
(
"/"
,
$self
->date() );
}
elsif
(
$code
== 5)
{
return
join
(
"/"
,
$self
->date() ) .
" "
.
join
(
":"
,
$self
->
time
() );
}
elsif
(
$code
== 6)
{
return
join
(
"|"
,
$self
->date() );
}
elsif
(
$code
== 7)
{
return
join
(
"|"
,
$self
->datetime() );
}
else
{
die
"internal error"
;
}
}
Date::Calc->number_format(\
&handler
);
Date::Calc->delta_format(\
&handler
);
Date::Calc->date_format(\
&handler
);
This sets
our
handler to take care of all automatic conversions,
such as needed
when
comparing dates or
when
interpolating a string
in double quotes which contains a date object.
To deactivate a handler, simply pass a valid
format
number to the
method in question, e.g.:
Date::Calc->number_format(0);
Date::Calc->delta_format(2);
Date::Calc->date_format(3);
When calling the
"number()"
or
"string()"
method explicitly, you can
pass a different
format
number (than the global setting), like this:
$number
=
$date
->number(2);
$string
=
$date
->string(1);
You can also pass a handler's reference, like so:
$number
=
$date
->number(\
&handler
);
$string
=
$date
->string(\
&handler
);
This overrides the global setting and the individual object's
local
setting
for
the duration of the call of
"number()"
or
"string()"
(but doesn't change the global or
local
settings themselves).
Moreover, you can also define individual overrides
for
the date and
the delta vector formats (but not the number
format
)
for
individual
objects, e.g.:
$date
->delta_format(1);
$date
->date_format(2);
$date
->delta_format(\
&handler
);
$date
->date_format(\
&handler
);
In order to deactivate an individual handler
for
an object, and/or
in order to deactivate any
override
altogether (so that the global
settings apply again), you have to pass
"undef"
explicitly to the
method in question:
$date
->delta_format(
undef
);
$date
->date_format(
undef
);
You can also define a language
for
individual objects (see the
next
section immediately below
for
more details).
If such an individual language
override
has
been set, it will
be passed to your callback handlers as the third parameter (in
the case of
"string"
conversions, but not in the case of
"number"
conversions).
Otherwise, the global settings as
defined
by C<Language(
$lang
);>
or C<Date::Calc->language(
$lang
);> will be passed to your handler.
=item *
Languages
Note that this module is completely transparent to the setting
of a language in
"Date::Calc"
. This means that you can choose a
language in
"Date::Calc"
(
with
the
"Language()"
function) and all
dates subsequently printed by this module will automatically be
in that language - provided that you
use
the built-in formats of
this module, or that you pass the third parameter of the callback
funtion to the funtions of the
"Date::Calc"
module which
accept
it.
However, this global language setting can be overridden
for
individual date (or delta) objects by using the B<OBJECT> method
$oldlang
=
$date
->language(
$newlang
);
(The global setting is not altered by this in any way.)
In order to deactivate such an individual language setting
(so that the global setting applies again), simply pass the
value
"undef"
explicitly to the
"language()"
object method:
$date
->language(
undef
);
The B<CLASS> method
$oldlang
= Date::Calc->language(
$newlang
);
is just a convenient wrapper
around
the
"Language()"
function,
which allows you to enter language numbers (as returned by the
"Decode_Language()"
function) or strings (as returned by the
"Language_to_Text()"
function), whatever you prefer.
The
"language()"
method (both class and object) always returns
the B<NAME> (one of
"C<Language_to_Text(1..Languages())>"
) of
the current setting (and never its number).
BEWARE that in order to avoid possible conflicts between threads
or modules running concurrently, you should NEVER
use
the global
function C<Language(
$lang
);> or the class method
C<Date::Calc->language(
$lang
);> in this module!
The class method is retained only
for
backward compatibility
and
for
convenience in stand-alone applications
when
it is
guaranteed that
no
such conflicts can arise.
But you should probably avoid to
use
global settings anyway,
because it may be especially troublesome to fix your code later
when
suddenly the need arises to
use
your code
with
threads
or
when
your code needs to
use
other modules which also
use
"Date::Calc"
(
with
different settings!).
By exclusively using
local
settings, you are making your code
invulnerable against other, concurrent modules also using
"Date::Calc"
which still
use
global settings.
=item *
Exported Functions
The
"Date::Calc::Object"
package
imports
":all"
functions exported
by the
"Date::Calc"
module and re-exports them,
for
conveniency.
This allows you to
write
instead of
but
with
exactly the same semantics. The difference is that
the object-oriented frontend is loaded additionally in the
first case.
of
"Date::Calc"
's functions:
In addition to the functions exported by
"Date::Calc"
, the
"Date::Calc::Object"
package
offers some utility functions
of its own
for
export:
$year
= shift_year(\
@_
);
(
$year
,
$mm
,
$dd
) = shift_date(\
@_
);
(
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
) = shift_time(\
@_
);
(
$year
,
$mm
,
$dd
,
$hrs
,
$min
,
$sec
) = shift_datetime(\
@_
);
These functions enable your subroutines or methods to
accept
a
"Date::Calc"
(or subclass) date object, an (anonymous) array
or a list (containing the necessary
values
) as parameters
B<INTERCHANGEABLY>.
You can
import
all of these auxiliary functions by using an
":aux"
tag:
If you want to
import
both all of the
"Date::Calc"
functions
as well as all these auxiliary functions,
use
the
":ALL"
tag:
=item *
Subclassing
In case you want to subclass
"Date::Calc"
objects and to add
new attributes of your own, it is recommended that you proceed
as follows (the following will be considered as a part of the
module's
"contract of use"
- which might be subject to change
in the future, however):
Define a constant
for
the
index
of
each
attribute you want to
add, currently starting
no
lower than
"4"
, at the top of your
subclass:
...
It is recommended that you
use
constants (which are easy to
change), because I someday might want to
require
the element
with
index
"4"
for
a new attribute of
my
own... C<:-)>
Then access your attributes like so (e.g.
after
calling
"C<$self = SUPER-E<gt>new();>"
in your constructor method):
$self
->[0][ATTRIB1] =
'value1'
;
$self
->[0][ATTRIB2] =
'value2'
;
$self
->[0][ATTRIB3] =
'value3'
;
...
Beware that
if
you put anything other than numbers or strings
into your attributes, the methods
"clone()"
and
"copy()"
might
not work as expected anymore!
Especially
if
your attributes contain references to other data
structures, only the references will be copied, but not the data
structures themselves.
This may not be what you want.
(You will have to
override
these two methods and
write
some
of your own
if
not.)
In order
for
the overloaded operators and the
"shift_*()"
auxiliary functions from the
"Date::Calc::Object"
package
to work properly (the latter of which are heavily used in
the
"Date::Calendar[::Year]"
modules,
for
instance), the
package
name of your subclass (= the one your objects will
be blessed into) is B<REQUIRED> to contain a
"::"
.
Note that you should B<ONLY> subclass
"Date::Calc"
, B<NEVER>
"Date::Calc::Object"
, since subclassing the latter is less
efficient (because
"Date::Calc::Object"
is just an empty class
which inherits from
"Date::Calc"
- subclassing
"Date::Calc::Object"
would thus just introduce an additional name space layer to search
during Perl's runtime method binding process).
If you give your subclass a
package
name below/inside the
"Date::"
namespace, you will also benefit from the fact that
all error messages produced by the
"Date::Calc[::Object]"
module
(and also the
"Date::Calendar[::Year]"
modules, by the way)
will appear to have originated from the place outside of all
"C</^Date::/>"
modules (including yours) where one of the
"Date::"
modules was first called - i.e., all errors are always blamed
on the user,
no
matter how deeply nested inside the
"Date::"
modules they occur, and
do
not usually refer to places inside
any of the
"Date::"
modules (this assumes that there are
no
bugs in the
"Date::"
modules, and that all errors are always
the user's fault C<:-)>).
Moreover, your module's own error messages will behave in the
same way
if
you
"C<use Carp::Clan qw(^Date::);>"
at the top of
your module and
if
you produce all error messages using
"carp()"
and
"croak()"
(instead of
"warn()"
and
"die()"
, respectively).
=back
=head1 EXAMPLES
=over 3
=item 1)
$now
= Date::Calc->now();
if
((
$now
ge [2000,3,26,2,0,0]) and
(
$now
lt [2000,3,26,3,0,0]))
{
$now
+= [0,0,0,1,0,0];
}
=item 2)
Date::Calc->date_format(3);
$date
= 0;
while
(!
$date
)
{
print
"Please enter the date of your birthday (day-month-year): "
;
$date
= Date::Calc->new( Decode_Date_EU(
scalar
(<STDIN>) ) );
if
(
$date
)
{
$resp
= 0;
while
(
$resp
!~ /^\s*[YyNn]/)
{
print
"Your birthday is: $date\n"
;
print
"Is that correct? (yes/no) "
;
$resp
= <STDIN>;
}
$date
= 0
unless
(
$resp
=~ /^\s*[Yy]/)
}
else
{
print
"Unable to parse your birthday. Please try again.\n"
;
}
}
if
(
$date
+ [18,0,0] <= [Today()])
{
print
"Ok, you are over 18.\n"
; }
else
{
print
"Sorry, you are under 18!\n"
; }
=back
For more examples, see the
"examples"
subdirectory in this distribution,
and their descriptions in the file
"EXAMPLES.txt"
.
=head1 SEE ALSO
Date::Calc(3), Date::Calc::Util(3), Date::Calendar(3),
Date::Calendar::Year(3), Date::Calendar::Profiles(3).
=head1 VERSION
This man page documents
"Date::Calc::Object"
version 6.4.
=head1 AUTHOR
Steffen Beyer
mailto:STBEY
@cpan
.org
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2000 - 2015 by Steffen Beyer. All rights reserved.
=head1 LICENSE
This
package
is free software; you can
use
, modify and redistribute
it under the same terms as Perl itself, i.e., at your option, under
the terms either of the
"Artistic License"
or the "GNU General Public
License".
The C library at the core of the module
"Date::Calc::XS"
can, at your
discretion, also be used, modified and redistributed under the terms
of the
"GNU Library General Public License"
.
Please refer to the files
"Artistic.txt"
,
"GNU_GPL.txt"
and
"GNU_LGPL.txt"
in the
"license"
subdirectory of this distribution
for
any details!
=head1 DISCLAIMER
This
package
is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
See the
"GNU General Public License"
for
more details.