NAME
Media::DateTime - A simple module to extract the timestamp from media files in an flexible manner.
VERSION
version 0.49
SYNOPSIS
use DateTime;
use Media::DateTime;
my $dt = Media::DateTime->datetime( $file );
# or more cleanly OO
my $dater = Media::DateTime->new;
my $dt = $dater->datetime( $file );
DESCRIPTION
Provides a very simple, but highly extensible method of extracting the creation date and time from a media file (any file really). The base module comes with support for JPEG files that store the creation date in the exif header.
Plugins can be written to support any file format. See the Media::DateTime::JPEG
module for an example.
If no plugin is found for a particular file (or the plugin returns a false vale) the file creation date as specified by the O/S is used.
Returns a DateTime
object.
METHODs
- new
-
Constructor that returns a
Media::DateTime
object. Methods can be called on either the class or an instance.my $dt = Media::DateTime->new;
- datetime
-
Takes a file as an arguement and returns a
DateTime
object representing its creation date. Falls back to the creation date specified by the filesystem if no plugin is available.my $dt = Media::DateTime->datetime( $file ); # or my $dt = $dater->datetime( $file );
SEE ALSO
See the excellent DateTime
module which simplifies the handling of dates. See Module::Pluggable
and Module::Pluggable::Ordered
which are used to implement the plugin system. Image::Info
is used to extract data from JPEG files for the Media::DateTime::JPEG
plugin.
Make sure you have configured the local time zone on your machine. See DateTime::TimeZone::Local
for information on how the timezone is determined.
AUTHOR
Mark Grimes, <mgrimes@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Mark Grimes, <mgrimes@cpan.org>.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.