NAME
Date::Easy::Units - units objects for easy date/datetime math
VERSION
This document describes version 0.07 of Date::Easy::Units.
SYNOPSIS
use Date::Easy::Units ':all';
my @units = (seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years);
my $quarters = 3 * months; # set the quantity (default: 1)
my $year1 = 4 * $quarters; # a year is 12 months
my $year2 = 1 * years; # `1 *' is redudant, but clearer
# units stringify as you'd expect
say 3 * weeks;
# prints "3 weeks"
say 1 * hours;
# prints "1 hour"
# $year1 and $year2 are _conceptually_ equal
today + $year1 == today + $year2; # true
# but not _actually_ equal
$year1 ne $year2; # because "12 months" ne "1 year"
DESCRIPTION
Date::Easy::Units objects represent a quantity and a unit: seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, or years. The default quantity is 1, but you can multiply that by an integer (positive or negative) to get a different quantity. Multiplying a quantity other than 1 by an integer does what you expect.
You could create a units object the "normal" OOP way:
my $s1 = Date::Easy::Units->new("seconds");
my $m4 = Date::Easy::Units->new("minutes", 4);
But you will rarely do it that way. More likely you'll just use the exportable (but not exported by default) functions:
my $s1 = seconds;
my $m4 = 4 * minutes;
Arithmetic operators (plus and minus) can be used to add or subtract some amount of time to or from a date or datetime. Multiplcation can be used to change the quantity of a units object (as shown above).
Units objects are immutable.
See Date::Easy for more general usage notes.
USAGE
Import Parameters
You can request only certain of the constructors below be exported, or use :all
to get them all.
Constructors
seconds
minutes
hours
days
weeks
months
years
Each constructor returns a units object with the specified unit and a quantity of 1. Multiply them by an integer to get a different quantity.
new
Takes either one or two arguments: unit name (required) and quantity (optional). Most of the time you will not use this.
(Technically speaking, you can use new
to create any unit you want. So you might:
my $u = Date::Easy::Units->new("bmoogles");
say $u; # prints "1 bmoogle"
say $u * 4; # prints "4 bmoogles"
my $d = my_date_thing();
$d + $u * 4; # calls $d->add_bmoogles(4)
and, assuming my_date_thing
returns an object with an add_bmoogles
method (and a subtract_bmoogles
method), that will actually work. Then you could even:
sub bmoogles () { Date::Easy::Units->new("bmoogles") }
say my_date_thing() + 4*bmoogles;
Not saying that any of that is a good idea, of course ... just that you could, if you were so inclined.)
Other Methods
to_string
Does the work of the overloaded stringification, in case you ever want to call it explicitly.
Overloaded Operators
Multiplication
Returns a new units object with the same unit and a quantity equal to the existing quantity times the operand. Thus, the operand should be an integer. Multiplying by a floating point causes an exception. Multiplying by a string likely just gets you 0 (depending on whether your string can be interpreted as a number), and probably a warning (if you have warnings turned on (which you should)).
Addition
When you add a units object to a date (Date::Easy::Date) or a datetime (Date::Easy::Datetime), it adds the appropriate number of the appropriate units to that date or datetime. Thus:
use Date::Easy;
say datetime("2010-01-01 noon") + 3*hours + 39*minutes;
# prints "Fri Jan 1 15:39:00 2010"
say 14*weeks + date("2015-07-17");
# addition is transitive: prints "Fri Oct 23 00:00:00 2015"
say today + 14*hours;
# throws exception: you can't add fractional days to a date
say 3*months + 4*days;
# throws exception: you can't add units to each other
say now + 3*months + 4*days;
# fine: addition is evaluated left-to-right
Subtraction
Subtracting a units object is just like adding the same units object times -1, except that of course subtraction is not transitive. So:
use Date::Easy;
say now - 14*hours;
# fine
say 14*hours - now;
# throws exception: nonsensical
BUGS, CAVEATS and NOTES
This:
use Date::Easy::Units ':all';
say -1 * seconds;
prints "-1 seconds" as opposed to "-1 second." Whether or not you consider that a bug depends on where your concepts of arithmetic and grammar intersect.
See also "Limitations" in Date::Easy.
AUTHOR
Buddy Burden <barefootcoder@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2019 by Buddy Burden.
This is free software, licensed under:
The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)