NAME
DateTime::Format::Flexible - DateTime::Format::Flexible - Flexibly parse strings and turn them into DateTime objects.
SYNOPSIS
use DateTime::Format::Flexible;
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime(
'January 8, 1999'
);
# $dt = a DateTime object set at 1999-01-08T00:00:00
DESCRIPTION
If you have ever had to use a program that made you type in the date a certain way and thought "Why can't the computer just figure out what date I wanted?", this module is for you.
DateTime::Format::Flexible attempts to take any string you give it and parse it into a DateTime object.
USAGE
This module uses DateTime::Format::Builder under the covers.
parse_datetime
Give it a string and it attempts to parse it and return a DateTime object.
If it cannot it will throw an exception.
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( $date );
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime(
$date,
strip => [qr{\.\z}], # optional, remove a trailing period
tz_map => {EDT => 'America/New_York'}, # optional, map the EDT timezone to America/New_York
lang => ['es'], # optional, only parse using spanish
european => 1, # optional, catch some cases of DD-MM-YY
);
base
(optional)Does the same thing as the method
base
. Sets a base datetime for incomplete dates. Requires a valid DateTime object as an argument.example:
my $base_dt = DateTime->new( year => 2005, month => 2, day => 1 ); my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( '18 Mar', base => $base_dt, ); # $dt is now 2005-03-18T00:00:00
strip
(optional)Remove a substring from the string you are trying to parse. You can pass multiple regexes in an arrayref.
example:
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( '2011-04-26 00:00:00 (registry time)', strip => [qr{\(registry time\)\z}], ); # $dt is now 2011-04-26T00:00:00
This is helpful if you have a load of dates you want to normalize and you know of some weird formatting beforehand.
tz_map
(optional)Map a given timezone to another recognized timezone Values are given as a hashref.
example:
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( '25-Jun-2009 EDT', tz_map => {EDT => 'America/New_York'}, ); # $dt is now 2009-06-25T00:00:00 with a timezone of America/New_York
This is helpful if you have a load of dates that have timezones that are not recognized by DateTime::Timezone.
lang
(optional)Specify the language map plugins to use.
When DateTime::Format::Flexible parses a date with a string in it, it will search for a way to convert that string to a number. By default it will search through all the language plugins to search for a match.
NOTE: as of 0.22, it will only do this search if it detects a string in the given date.
Setting
lang
this lets you limit the scope of the search.example:
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( 'Wed, Jun 10, 2009', lang => ['en'], ); # $dt is now 2009-06-10T00:00:00
Currently supported languages are english (en), spanish (es) and german (de). Contributions, corrections, requests and examples are VERY welcome.
See the DateTime::Format::Flexible::lang::en, DateTime::Format::Flexible::lang::es, and DateTime::Format::Flexible::lang::de for examples of the plugins.
european
(optional)If european is set to a true value, an attempt will be made to parse as a DD-MM-YYYY date instead of the default MM-DD-YYYY. There is a chance that this will not do the right thing due to ambiguity.
example:
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( '16/06/2010' , european => 1, ); # $dt is now 2010-06-16T00:00:00
MMYY
(optional)By default, this module will parse 12/10 as December 10th of the current year (MM/DD).
If you want it to parse this as MM/YY instead, you can enable the
MMYY
option.example:
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime('12/10'); # $dt is now [current year]-12-10T00:00:00 my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( '12/10', MMYY => 1, ); # $dt is now 2010-12-01T00:00:00
This is useful if you know you are going to be parsing a credit card expiration date.
base
gets/sets the base DateTime for incomplete dates. Requires a valid DateTime object as an argument when setting. This defaults to DateTime->now.
example:
DateTime::Format::Flexible->base( DateTime->new(
year => 2009, month => 6, day => 22
));
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( '23:59' );
# $dt is now 2009-06-22T23:59:00
build
an alias for parse_datetime
Example formats
A small list of supported formats:
- YYYYMMDDTHHMMSS
- YYYYMMDDTHHMM
- YYYYMMDDTHH
- YYYYMMDD
- YYYYMM
- MM-DD-YYYY
- MM-D-YYYY
- MM-DD-YY
- M-DD-YY
- YYYY/DD/MM
- YYYY/M/DD
- YYYY/MM/D
- M-D
- MM-D
- M-D-Y
- Month D, YYYY
- Mon D, YYYY
- Mon D, YYYY HH:MM:SS
- ... thousands more
there are 9000+ variations that are detected correctly in the test files (see t/data/* for most of them). If you can think of any that I do not cover, please let me know.
NOTES
As of version 0.11 you will get a DateTime::Infinite::Future object if the passed in date is 'infinity' and a DateTime::Infinite::Past object if the passed in date is '-infinity'. If you are expecting these types of strings, you might want to check for 'is_infinite()' from the object returned.
example:
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Flexible->parse_datetime( 'infinity' );
if ( $dt->is_infinite )
{
# you have a Infinite object.
}
BUGS/LIMITATIONS
You cannot use a 1 or 2 digit year as the first field unless the year is > 31:
YY-MM-DD # not supported if YY is <= 31
Y-MM-DD # not supported
It gets confused with MM-DD-YY
AUTHOR
Tom Heady <cpan@punch.net>
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2007-2018 Tom Heady.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either:
the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version, or
the Artistic License.
SEE ALSO
DateTime::Format::Builder, DateTime::Timezone, DateTime::Format::Natural