NAME

DateTime::Format::Natural - Create machine readable date/time with natural parsing logic

SYNOPSIS

use DateTime::Format::Natural;

$parser = DateTime::Format::Natural->new;

$date_string  = $parser->extract_datetime($extract_string);
@date_strings = $parser->extract_datetime($extract_string);

$dt = $parser->parse_datetime($date_string);
@dt = $parser->parse_datetime_duration($date_string);

if ($parser->success) {
    # operate on $dt/@dt, for example:
    printf("%02d.%02d.%4d %02d:%02d:%02d\n", $dt->day,
                                             $dt->month,
                                             $dt->year,
                                             $dt->hour,
                                             $dt->min,
                                             $dt->sec);
} else {
    warn $parser->error;
}

@traces = $parser->trace;

DESCRIPTION

DateTime::Format::Natural takes a string with a human readable date/time and creates a machine readable one by applying natural parsing logic.

CONSTRUCTOR

new

Creates a new DateTime::Format::Natural object. Arguments to new() are options and not necessarily required.

$parser = DateTime::Format::Natural->new(
          datetime      => DateTime->new(...),
          lang          => 'en',
          format        => 'mm/dd/yy',
          prefer_future => '[0|1]',
          time_zone     => 'floating',
          daytime       => { morning   => 06,
                             afternoon => 13,
                             evening   => 20,
                           },
);
  • datetime

    Overrides the present now with a DateTime object provided.

  • lang

    Contains the language selected, currently limited to en (english). Defaults to 'en'.

  • format

    Specifies the format of numeric dates, defaults to 'd/m/y'.

  • prefer_future

    Turns ambiguous weekdays/months to their future relatives. Accepts a boolean, defaults to false.

  • time_zone

    The time zone to use when parsing and for output. Accepts any time zone recognized by DateTime. Defaults to 'floating'.

  • daytime

    An anonymous hash reference consisting of customized daytime hours, which may be selectively changed.

METHODS

parse_datetime

Returns a DateTime object constructed from a human readable date/time string.

$dt = $parser->parse_datetime($date_string);
$dt = $parser->parse_datetime(string => $date_string);
  • string

    The date string.

parse_datetime_duration

Returns one or two DateTime objects constructed from a human readable date/time string which may contain timespans/durations. Same interface and options as parse_datetime(), but should be explicitly called in list context.

@dt = $parser->parse_datetime_duration($date_string);
@dt = $parser->parse_datetime_duration(string => $date_string);

extract_datetime

Returns parsable date/time substrings (also known as expressions) extracted from the string provided; in scalar context only the first parsable substring is returned, whereas in list context all parsable substrings are returned. Each extracted substring can then be passed to the parse_datetime()/ parse_datetime_duration() methods.

$date_string  = $parser->extract_datetime($extract_string);
@date_strings = $parser->extract_datetime($extract_string);
# or
$date_string  = $parser->extract_datetime(string => $extract_string);
@date_strings = $parser->extract_datetime(string => $extract_string);

success

Returns a boolean indicating success or failure for parsing the date/time string given.

error

Returns the error message if the parsing did not succeed.

trace

Returns one or two strings with the grammar keyword for the valid expression parsed, traces of methods which were called within the Calc class and a summary how often certain units have been modified. More than one string is commonly returned for durations. Useful as a debugging aid.

GRAMMAR

The grammar handling has been rewritten to be easily extendable and hence everybody is encouraged to propose sensible new additions and/or changes.

See the classes DateTime::Format::Natural::Lang::[language_code] if you're intending to hack a bit on the grammar guts.

EXAMPLES

See the classes DateTime::Format::Natural::Lang::[language_code] for an overview of currently valid input.

BUGS & CAVEATS

parse_datetime()/parse_datetime_duration() always return one or two DateTime objects regardless whether the parse was successful or not. In case no valid expression was found or a failure occurred, an unaltered DateTime object with its initial values (most often the "current" now) is likely to be returned. It is therefore recommended to use success() to assert that the parse did succeed (at least, for common uses), otherwise the absence of a parse failure cannot be guaranteed.

parse_datetime() is not capable of handling durations.

CREDITS

Thanks to Tatsuhiko Miyagawa for the initial inspiration. See Miyagawa's journal entry http://use.perl.org/~miyagawa/journal/31378 for more information.

Furthermore, thanks to (in order of appearance) who have contributed valuable suggestions and patches:

Clayton L. Scott
Dave Rolsky
CPAN Author 'SEKIMURA'
mike (pulsation)
Mark Stosberg
Tuomas Jormola
Cory Watson
Urs Stotz
Shawn M. Moore
Andreas J. König
Chia-liang Kao
Jonny Schulz
Jesse Vincent
Jason May
Pat Kale
Ankur Gupta
Alex Bowley
Elliot Shank
Anirvan Chatterjee
Michael Reddick
Christian Brink
Giovanni Pensa
Andrew Sterling Hanenkamp
Eric Wilhelm
Kevin Field
Wes Morgan
Vladimir Marek
Rod Taylor
Tim Esselens
Colm Dougan
Chifung Fan
Xiao Yafeng
Roman Filippov
David Steinbrunner

SEE ALSO

dateparse, DateTime, Date::Calc, http://datetime.perl.org

AUTHOR

Steven Schubiger <schubiger@cpan.org>

LICENSE

This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/

1 POD Error

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 802:

Non-ASCII character seen before =encoding in 'König'. Assuming CP1252