NAME
DateTime::SpanSet - set of DateTime spans
SYNOPSIS
$spanset = DateTime::SpanSet->from_spans( spans => [ $dt_span, $dt_span ] );
$set = $spanset->union( $set2 ); # like "OR", "insert", "both"
$set = $spanset->complement( $set2 ); # like "delete", "remove"
$set = $spanset->intersection( $set2 ); # like "AND", "while"
$set = $spanset->complement; # like "NOT", "negate", "invert"
if ( $spanset->intersects( $set2 ) ) { ... # like "touches", "interferes"
if ( $spanset->contains( $set2 ) ) { ... # like "is-fully-inside"
# data extraction
$date = $spanset->min; # first date of the set
$date = $spanset->max; # last date of the set
$iter = $spanset->iterator;
while ( $dt = $iter->next ) {
# $dt is a DateTime::Span
print $dt->start->ymd; # first date of span
print $dt->end->ymd; # last date of span
};
DESCRIPTION
DateTime::SpanSet is a class that represents sets of datetime spans. An example would be a recurring meeting that occurs from 13:00-15:00 every Friday.
METHODS
from_spans
Creates a new span set from one or more
DateTime::Span
objects.$spanset = DateTime::SpanSet->from_spans( spans => [ $dt_span ] );
from_set_and_duration
Creates a new span set from one or more
DateTime::Set
objects and a duration.The duration can be a
DateTime::Duration
object, or the parameters to create a newDateTime::Duration
object, such as "days", "months", etc.$spanset = DateTime::SpanSet->from_set_and_duration ( set => $dt_set, days => 1 );
from_sets
Creates a new span set from two
DateTime::Set
objects.One set defines the starting dates, and the other defines the end dates.
$spanset = DateTime::SpanSet->from_sets ( start_set => $dt_set1, end_set => $dt_set2 );
The spans have the starting date
closed
, and the end dateopen
, like in[$dt1, $dt2)
.If an end date comes without a starting date before it, then it defines a span like
(-inf, $dt)
.If a starting date comes without an end date after it, then it defines a span like
[$dt, inf)
.empty_set
Creates a new empty set.
clone
This object method returns a replica of the given object.
set_time_zone( $tz )
This method accepts either a time zone object or a string that can be passed as the "name" parameter to
DateTime::TimeZone->new()
. If the new time zone's offset is different from the old time zone, then the local time is adjusted accordingly.If the old time zone was a floating time zone, then no adjustments to the local time are made, except to account for leap seconds. If the new time zone is floating, then the UTC time is adjusted in order to leave the local time untouched.
min
max
First or last dates in the set. These methods may return
undef
if the set is empty. It is also possible that these methods may return a scalar containing infinity or negative infinity.duration
The total size of the set, as a
DateTime::Duration
object.The duration may be infinite.
Also available as
size()
.span
The total span of the set, as a
DateTime::Span
object.next
my $span = $set->next( $dt );
This method is used to find the next span in the set, after a given datetime or span.
The return value is a
DateTime::Span
, orundef
if there is no matching span in the set.previous
my $span = $set->previous( $dt );
This method is used to find the previous span in the set, before a given datetime or span.
The return value is a
DateTime::Span
, orundef
if there is no matching span in the set.current
my $span = $set->current( $dt );
This method is used to find the "current" span in the set, that intersects a given datetime or span. If no current span is found, then the "previous" span is returned.
The return value is a
DateTime::SpanSet
, orundef
if there is no matching span in the set.If a span parameter is given, it may happen that "current" returns more than one span.
See also:
intersected_spans()
method.closest
my $span = $set->closest( $dt );
This method is used to find the "closest" span in the set, given a datetime or span.
The return value is a
DateTime::SpanSet
, orundef
if the set is empty.If a span parameter is given, it may happen that "closest" returns more than one span.
as_list
Returns a list of
DateTime::Span
objects.my @dt_span = $set->as_list( span => $span );
Just as with the
iterator()
method, theas_list()
method can be limited by a span.Applying
as_list()
to a large recurring spanset is a very expensive operation, both in CPU time and in the memory used.For this reason, when
as_list()
operates on large recurrence sets, it will return at most approximately 200 spans. For larger sets, and for infinite sets,as_list()
will returnundef
.Please note that this is explicitly not an empty list, since an empty list is a valid return value for empty sets!
If you really need to extract spans from a large set, you can:
- limit the set with a shorter span:
my @short_list = $large_set->as_list( span => $short_span );
- use an iterator:
my @large_list; my $iter = $large_set->iterator; push @large_list, $dt while $dt = $iter->next;
union
intersection
complement
Set operations may be performed not only with
DateTime::SpanSet
objects, but also withDateTime
,DateTime::Set
andDateTime::Span
objects. These set operations always return aDateTime::SpanSet
object.$set = $spanset->union( $set2 ); # like "OR", "insert", "both" $set = $spanset->complement( $set2 ); # like "delete", "remove" $set = $spanset->intersection( $set2 ); # like "AND", "while" $set = $spanset->complement; # like "NOT", "negate", "invert"
intersected_spans
This method can accept a
DateTime
list, aDateTime::Set
, aDateTime::Span
, or aDateTime::SpanSet
object as an argument.$set = $set1->intersected_spans( $set2 );
The method always returns a
DateTime::SpanSet
object, containing all spans that are intersected by the given set.Unlike the
intersection
method, the spans are not modified. See diagram below:set1 [....] [....] [....] [....] set2 [................] intersection [.] [....] [.] intersected_spans [....] [....] [....]
intersects
contains
These set functions return a boolean value.
if ( $spanset->intersects( $set2 ) ) { ... # like "touches", "interferes" if ( $spanset->contains( $dt ) ) { ... # like "is-fully-inside"
These methods can accept a
DateTime
,DateTime::Set
,DateTime::Span
, orDateTime::SpanSet
object as an argument.iterator / next / previous
This method can be used to iterate over the spans in a set.
$iter = $spanset->iterator; while ( $dt = $iter->next ) { # $dt is a DateTime::Span print $dt->min->ymd; # first date of span print $dt->max->ymd; # last date of span }
The boundaries of the iterator can be limited by passing it a
span
parameter. This should be aDateTime::Span
object which delimits the iterator's boundaries. Optionally, instead of passing an object, you can pass any parameters that would work for one of theDateTime::Span
class's constructors, and an object will be created for you.Obviously, if the span you specify does is not restricted both at the start and end, then your iterator may iterate forever, depending on the nature of your set. User beware!
The
next()
orprevious()
methods will returnundef
when there are no more spans in the iterator.start_set
end_set
These methods do the inverse of the
from_sets
method:start_set
retrieves a DateTime::Set with the start datetime of each span.end_set
retrieves a DateTime::Set with the end datetime of each span.map ( sub { ... } )
# example: enlarge the spans $set = $set2->map( sub { my $start = $_->start; my $end = $_->end; return DateTime::Span->from_datetimes( start => $start, before => $end, ); } );
This method is the "set" version of Perl "map".
It evaluates a subroutine for each element of the set (locally setting "$_" to each DateTime::Span) and returns the set composed of the results of each such evaluation.
Like Perl "map", each element of the set may produce zero, one, or more elements in the returned value.
Unlike Perl "map", changing "$_" does not change the original set. This means that calling map in void context has no effect.
The callback subroutine may not be called immediately. Don't count on subroutine side-effects. For example, a
print
inside the subroutine may happen later than you expect.The callback return value is expected to be within the span of the
previous
and thenext
element in the original set.For example: given the set
[ 2001, 2010, 2015 ]
, the callback result for the value2010
is expected to be within the span[ 2001 .. 2015 ]
.grep ( sub { ... } )
# example: filter out all spans happening today my $today = DateTime->today; $set = $set2->grep( sub { return ( ! $_->contains( $today ) ); } );
This method is the "set" version of Perl "grep".
It evaluates a subroutine for each element of the set (locally setting "$_" to each DateTime::Span) and returns the set consisting of those elements for which the expression evaluated to true.
Unlike Perl "grep", changing "$_" does not change the original set. This means that calling grep in void context has no effect.
Changing "$_" does change the resulting set.
The callback subroutine may not be called immediately. Don't count on subroutine side-effects. For example, a
print
inside the subroutine may happen later than you expect.iterate
Internal method - use "map" or "grep" instead.
This function apply a callback subroutine to all elements of a set and returns the resulting set.
The parameter
$_[0]
to the callback subroutine is aDateTime::Span
object.If the callback returns
undef
, the datetime is removed from the set:sub remove_sundays { $_[0] unless $_[0]->start->day_of_week == 7; }
The callback return value is expected to be within the span of the
previous
and thenext
element in the original set.For example: given the set
[ 2001, 2010, 2015 ]
, the callback result for the value2010
is expected to be within the span[ 2001 .. 2015 ]
.The callback subroutine may not be called immediately. Don't count on subroutine side-effects. For example, a
print
inside the subroutine may happen later than you expect.
SUPPORT
Support is offered through the datetime@perl.org
mailing list.
Please report bugs using rt.cpan.org
AUTHOR
Flavio Soibelmann Glock <fglock@pucrs.br>
The API was developed together with Dave Rolsky and the DateTime Community.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2003 Flavio Soibelmann Glock. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can distribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.
SEE ALSO
Set::Infinite
For details on the Perl DateTime Suite project please see http://datetime.perl.org.